GC43B-1191
Assessment of water availability and demand in Lake Guiers , Senegal.

Thursday, 17 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Djiby Sambou1, Dinah Weihrauch1, Vera Hellwing1, Bernd Diekkrüger1, Britta Höllermann1 and Amadou Thierno Gaye2, (1)University of Bonn, Geography, Bonn, Germany, (2)Laboratoire de Physique de l'Atmosphere et de L'Ocean, Ecole Superieure Polytechnique, Dakar, Senegal
Abstract:
Assessment of water availability and demand in Lake Guiers, Senegal

Water resources are critical to economic growth and social development. In most African countries, supply of drinking water to satisfy population needs is a key issue because of population growth and climate and land use change. During the last three decades, increasing population, changing patterns of water demand, and concentration of population and economic activities in urban areas has pressurize Senegal’s freshwater resources. To overcome this deficit, Senegal turned, to the exploitation of the Lake Guiers. It is the sole water reservoir which can be used extensively as a stable freshwater. Its water is use for irrigating crops and sugar refinery and as a drinking water resource for urban centres, including Dakar, the capital city of Senegal, as well as for the local population and animal herds. To ensure sustainability, a greater understanding of Lake Guiers’s water resources and effective management of its use will be required. In this study we developed and quantified future water situation (water availability and demand) in Lake Guiers under scenarios of climate change and population growth until 2050, using the water management model WEAP (Water Evaluation And Planning system). The results show that the pressure on Lake Guiers’s water resources will increase, leading to greater competition between agriculture and municipal demand site. Decreasing inflows due to climate change will aggravate this situation. WEAP results offer basis to assister lake Guiers water resources manager for an efficient long-term planning and management.

Keywords: climate change, population growth , IWRM, Lake Guiers, Senegal