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A multi-model assessment of global freshwater temperature and thermoelectric power supply under climate change

Jones, Edward R; van Beek, Rens; Antonio Cardenas Belleza, Gabriel; Burek, Peter; Dugdale, Stephen J; Flörke, Martina; Fridman, Dor; Gosling, Simon N; Kumar, Rohini; Mercado-Bettin, Daniel

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Authors

Edward R Jones

Rens van Beek

Gabriel Antonio Cardenas Belleza

Peter Burek

Martina Flörke

Dor Fridman

Rohini Kumar

Daniel Mercado-Bettin



Abstract

Water temperature is a key abiotic factor influencing aquatic ecosystem health and the services provided to both nature and humans. Global water temperature models offer possibilities to improve our understanding of water temperature regimes, which is increasingly important against the backdrop of climate change. Yet, most previous studies have predominantly relied on a single model, which can lead to an incomplete representation of uncertainty, potential biases, and limited insight into the range of possible future conditions, which ultimately reduces the robustness of climate impact assessments. Here, we provide a comprehensive assessment of surface freshwater temperature changes from various river and lake models for both past conditions and under future scenarios of climate change. Global models consistently simulate that water temperatures are now 0.5-0.8ºC higher than at the turn of the century (i.e. 1981-2000), and that warming will extend and intensify with future global change throughout the 21st century. While the strength of warming is highly sensitive to the different water temperature models, emissions scenarios and global climate models, our multi-model ensemble shows a global average annual water temperature rise of between +1.3 ºC and +4.1 ºC by the end of the century. To illustrate a potential societal impact of our results, we evaluate how future changes in discharge and water temperature may affect existing thermoelectric power plants, estimating average annual reductions of 1.5-6% in global usable capacity by the end of the century. However, with river water temperatures projected to exhibit more pronounced seasonal patterns in the future – especially under the more extreme climate change scenarios and during summer months in the Northern Hemisphere – intra-annual reductions in usable capacity can be much more severe. Given the challenges associated with (large-scale) adaptation to control water temperature regimes, strong climate change mitigation is crucial for minimising water temperature rises and its associated negative impacts on humankind and ecosystems.

Citation

Jones, E. R., van Beek, R., Antonio Cardenas Belleza, G., Burek, P., Dugdale, S. J., Flörke, M., Fridman, D., Gosling, S. N., Kumar, R., & Mercado-Bettin, D. (in press). A multi-model assessment of global freshwater temperature and thermoelectric power supply under climate change. Environmental Research: Water, https://doi.org/10.1088/3033-4942/addffa

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 3, 2025
Deposit Date Jun 6, 2025
Publicly Available Date Jun 6, 2025
Journal Environmental Research: Water
Electronic ISSN 3033-4942
Publisher IOP Publishing
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1088/3033-4942/addffa
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/49911439
Publisher URL https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/3033-4942/addffa

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