Amal Sarfraz

Department of Civil and Structural Engineering

Research Student

asarfraz1@sheffield.ac.uk

Full contact details

Amal Sarfraz
Department of Civil and Structural Engineering
Sir Frederick Mappin Building (Broad Lane Building)
Mappin Street
Sheffield
S1 3JD
Research interests

Research Project: Evaluating the Effects of Climate Change on Indus River Basin

Climate change is an undisputable reality; there is enough scientific evidence to rank it as the most significant challenge to global sustainability. Climate change has manifested itself in several ways, most drastically through extreme-weather events, biodiversity loss, changes in land use, and water scarcity worldwide. Pakistan, a developing country with a foray of challenges due to climate change, deal with extreme weather events such as floods, droughts, and severe water scarcity. As an agriculture-based economy, Pakistan suffers from the depletion of water resources in its primary river system – the Indus River Basin. The assessment of interactions among rising agricultural demand, socioeconomic development and climate change are crucial to determine extreme events such as droughts to assess water scarcity in IRB. Given the number of threats and the physical and socioeconomic processes that interact with these threats, evaluating the future use of IRB requires models that integrate the dominant processes. These challenges stress the need to incorporate sustainable water resource management solutions to achieve short-term and long-term benefits in different time steps. This research aims to systematically explore and discover which processes are important for adaptation decisions in the IRB by confronting models that represent the fundamental processes at different scales, both in space and in time. This PhD will propose a novel coupling approach to combine the regional-scale Hydroeconomic Model with the global-scale Integrated Assessment Model to identify uncertain factors contributing to water scarcity under climate change and use them to inform adaptation.

Research group

Water Engineering