
Climate change made Cape Town’s recent drought three times more likely, climate models suggest.
The water shortage has been so severe that water is still limited to no more than 50 litres per person per day. At one point, the city almost had to switch off the water supply.
Cape Town’s situation was caused by three years of below average rainfall, starting in 2015. But, until now, it has been unclear exactly how much of a role global warming played.
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Local rainfall records do not go back very far, so it is not clear how rainfall patterns have changed. However, the drought also affected much of the western Cape region, including places that have rainfall records going right back to the 1930s.
So a team brought together by initiative ran several climate models to see how well they match the region’s climate since 1930 – the world as it is. They then ran the best-performing of these models without the 1°C global warming so far – the world as it might have been without climate change. Finally, they ran them again in a world that is 2°C warmer.
The team .
“For an event related to rainfall, three times is huge,” says team member Friederike Otto, a climate scientist at the University of Oxford. “This is the first study we have done where we have seen a significant change in drought risk.”
The real problem in Cape Town was the failure to adapt to cope with the new climate. As èƵ reported earlier this year, the South African government concluded in 2002 that its cities faced water shortages if nothing was done. A 2007 report on Cape Town concluded demand would exceed supply in 2018 – as it did.
This winter has brought above-average rainfall so far and the dams that supply water to the city and nearby farming regions water are half full, after dropping to around a quarter full. The prospect of the taps having to be turned off – Day Zero – has therefore receded, but tough water restrictions remain in place.
Local water experts say Cape Town needs to take a range of measures to make its water supply more resilient. These include recycling used water rather than just letting it run out to sea as now happens, and pumping water underground during times of good rainfall for use in dry years. The city is also building desalinisation plants but this is a very expensive source of water.