PhD Project
Mountains: Water towers for food production
Runoff from mountain areas have high significance for lowland hydrology and water resources. Therefore, mountains are also called “water towers”. Mountain runoff is especially important for irrigated agriculture downstream, which is the biggest user of water resources worldwide. For this reason, the project aims to quantify contribution of mountain runoff to lowland irrigation and food production under global change.
First, a framework to quantify the contribution of mountain runoff to low land irrigation and food production will be developed on the basis of a global hydrological model, a global glacier model and a crop growth model. Then, a few study basins will be used to conduct an in-depth analysis using the developed framework. This involves assessing the importance of mountain runoff for irrigated agriculture and food production under present conditions as well as selected future scenarios of socio-economic development and greenhouse gas emissions.
Supervisor: PD Dr. Daniel Viviroli daniel.viviroli@geo.uzh.ch
Co-supervisor: Prof. Dr. Jan Seibert jan.seibert@geo.uzh.ch
CV
- Ph.D. Candidate in Physical Geography, University of Zurich (since Dec. 2020)
- M.Sc. in Civil Engineering with specialization in Water Management and Hydrology, Delft University of Technology (2020)
- B.Sc. in Geoecology, Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen (2018)