Articles | Volume 20, issue 9
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-20-3967-2016
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-20-3967-2016
Research article
 | 
27 Sep 2016
Research article |  | 27 Sep 2016

A three-pillar approach to assessing climate impacts on low flows

Gregor Laaha, Juraj Parajka, Alberto Viglione, Daniel Koffler, Klaus Haslinger, Wolfgang Schöner, Judith Zehetgruber, and Günter Blöschl

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Cited articles

Blöschl, G. and Montanari, A.: Climate change impacts–throwing the dice?, Hydrol. Process., 24, 374–381, 2010.
Blöschl, G., Viglione, A., Merz, R., Parajka, J., Salinas, J. L., and Schöner, W.: Auswirkungen des Klimawandels auf Hochwasser und Niederwasser (Climate impacts on floods and low flows), Österr. Wasser- Abfallwirtsch., 63, 21–30, 2011.
Blöschl, G., Viglione, A., and Montanari, A.: Emerging Approaches to Hydrological Risk Management in a Changing World, in Climate Vulnerability, 3–10, Elsevier, 2013.
Böhm, R., Auer, I., Brunetti, M., Maugeri, M., Nanni, T., and Schöner, W.: Regional temperature variability in the European Alps: 1760–1998 from homogenized instrumental time series, Int. J. Climatol., 21, 1779–1801, https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.689, 2001.
Short summary
We present a framework for assessing climate impacts on future low flows that combines different sources of information termed pillars. To illustrate the framework, three pillars are chosen: low-flow observation, climate observations and climate projections. By combining different sources of information we aim at more robust projections than obtained from each pillar alone. The viability of the framework is illustrated for four example catchments from Austria.