Iowa Power Fund Board Project Report Update, July 29, 2009
Authors
Publication date
1 July 2009
Publisher
Abstract
Climate refers to the long-term course or condition of
weather, usually over a time scale of decades and longer.
It has been documented that our global climate is changing
(IPCC 2007, Copenhagen Diagnosis 2009), and Iowa
is no exception. In Iowa, statistically significant changes
in our precipitation, streamflow, nighttime minimum
temperatures, winter average temperatures, and dewpoint
humidity readings have occurred during the past
few decades.
Iowans are already living with warmer winters, longer
growing seasons, warmer nights, higher dew-point temperatures, increased humidity, greater annual streamflows, and more frequent severe precipitation events (Fig. 1-1) than were prevalent during the past 50 years. Some of the impacts of these changes could be construed as
positive, and some are negative, particularly the tendency
for greater precipitation events and flooding. In
the near-term, we may expect these trends to continue
as long as climate change is prolonged and exacerbated
by increasing greenhouse gas emissions globally from
the use of fossil fuels and fertilizers, the clearing of land, and agricultural and industrial emissions.
This report documents the impacts of changing climate
on Iowa during the past 50 years. It seeks to answer the
question, “What are the impacts of climate change in
Iowa that have been observed already?” And, “What are
the effects on public health, our flora and fauna, agriculture, and the general economy of Iowa?