Evolution of Drought Mitigation and Water Security through 100 Years of
Reservoir Expansion in Semi-Arid Brazil
Abstract
Early peopling of Brazil’s Northeast region (BRN) took place under an
intimate relationship between humans and water scarcity, as the region,
especially the state of Ceará (CE), has dealt historically with severe
drought events since the 1800’s, which commonly led to catastrophic
impacts of mass migration and deaths of thousands of people. Throughout
the last century, the so-called “Droughts Polygon” region experienced
intense infrastructural development, with the expansion of a dense
network of reservoirs. This resulted in the evolution of a complex
hydrologic system requiring a holistic investigation in terms of its
hydrologic tradeoffs. This paper presents a parsimonious hydrologic
modeling approach to investigate the 100-year (1920-2020) evolution of a
dense surface-water network in the 24,500 km² Upper Jaguaribe Basin,
with the ultimate goal of generating insights into the coevolution of a
tightly coupled human-water system. Our model is driven by both climatic
and human inputs, while model structure is allowed to evolve over time
to dynamically mimic evolution of population size, reservoir count and
water demand. Hundred years of continuous growth in storage capacity
experienced within the UJ Basin is found to reflect the transition from
complete vulnerability to droughts to achievement of significantly
increased levels of water security. However, drought severity had in the
meantime disproportionally intensified in this period, especially in
reservoirs of medium to small capacities. Our analysis results have
generated valuable insights into the different roles that reservoir
expansion has played in securing the stability of human settlement
patterns in drought prone regions.