Abstract:
The study focused on the Tono basin in the Kessena municipality in the Upper East Region of
Ghana. Due to poor data collection at the basin, there has not been any hydrological and climatic
assessment of the basin. To address these challenges the study explored the potential of using a
state of the art hydrological model (WRF-Hydro) in a coupled mode to assess these water
resources, particularly the Tono basin in Ghana. A 2-domain configuration was chosen: an outer
domain at 25 km horizontal resolution encompassing the West African Region and an inner
domain at 5 km horizontal resolution centered on the Tono basin. The infiltration partition
parameter (kdtref) and Manning’s roughness parameter (MannN) of the hydrological model were
calibrated to fit the simulated discharge with the observed one. The simulations were done from
1999-2007, using 1999 as a spin-up period. The results were compared with TRMM
precipitation, CRU temperature and available observed hydrological data. A standalone WRF
model was run for the same period to assess whether the coupled model (WRF/WRF-Hydro)
provides an improvement in estimating climate variables, e.g. precipitation and temperature. The
forcing data used to drive the model runs were, ERA interim reanalysis and ECHAM6. The
WRF/WRF-Hydro forced with ERA-I demonstrated a precipitation pattern of correlation with
observed (TRMM) data of about 0.91 and its centered RMS error of 2.4 mm/day, whereas WRFonly
forced with ERA-I produced a precipitation pattern of correlation of about 0.82 and a RMS
error of 3.6mm/day. For temperature, WRF/WRF-Hydro produced a pattern of correlation with
observed (CRU) data of about 0.94 and a RMS error of 0.6 0C, whereas WRF-only produced a
pattern of correlation of about 0.87 and a RMS error of 1.2 0C. Similar characteristics were
demonstrated by ECHAM6 model data; however, ECHAM6 produced the worst results
especially for the coupled approach. These variations in model performance can be attributed to
v
the optimum physics option chosen, which may not be the optimum in the Tono basin
(microscale effect) and also applying the same calibration for different models (coupled or
uncoupled). The WRF-Hydro model demonstrated strong signal of streamflow estimate; with
Nash-Sutcliff efficiency (NSE) of 0.78 and Pearson’s correlation of 0.89. Further validation of
model results was based on driving the output from the WRF-Hydro to a water balance model to
simulate the dam levels. The model-derived dam levels were in good agreement with the
observed dam levels with a correlation (R2) of 0.81. The deficiency in the modelled dam levels
could be attributed to the models’ over estimation of evaporation. Regarding climate change
impact on the Tono dam, two climate change emission scenarios were applied (i.e. RCP4.5 and
RCP8.5). Both scenarios did not agree on the signal of change with respect to precipitation but
both indicated a warmer condition. RCP4.5 indicated an annual rainfall projection increase of
+7%, which implies a future increase in flows of about 14% and RCP8.5 indicated rainfall
projection decrease by -9.6%, implying about 20% reduction in flows. There is therefore the
need to put in place adaptation measures to ensure the sustainability of the Tono dam in the face
of climate change.