Chile OECD Water
Chile OECD Water
Chile OECD Water
This country profile was compiled by the OECD Secretariat and reflects information available as of June 2013. Further information and
analysis can be found in the publication: OECD (2013) Water and Climate Change Adaptation: Policies to Navigate Uncharted Waters, OECD
Studies on Water, OECD Publishing. http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264200449-en. Country profiles for all OECD member countries are
available for download at: www.oecd.org/env/resources/waterandclimatechange.htm. These profiles will be regularly updated and it is
planned to expand coverage over time to include key partner countries.
Chile
Climate change impacts on water systems
Observed changes and • Rise in temperature in the Central Valley and particularly the Andes Mountains (where most of Chile’s water resources are stored)
trends for the period 1979-2006. For the same period, temperatures in the ocean and on the coast have tended to drop.
• Glaciers are in retreat.
Projected impacts • Increase in mean temperature for continental Chile by 2 °C to 4 °C, with greater increase in Andean regions and smaller increases toward the South. Only
in southern Chile are temperatures projected to rise by less than 1 °C. Greater warming in summer, exceeding 5 °C in some areas of the high Andes.
• Change in annual precipitation by more than 30% in some areas of the country by 2040. Central Chile (where 70% of the total population lives)
may see significant reduction in precipitation. Decrease in precipitation of around 20 to 25% between Antofagasta and Puerto Montt,
but an increase from Chiloé Island to the south.
• Reduction in the mountainous area capable of storing snow over successive years and shift in snow line towards higher altitudes.
• Retreat of glaciers will have a significant impact on water supply, as glaciers act as strategic water reserves, not only supplying water to river basins in
summer, but providing the single most important source of replenishment for rivers, lakes, and groundwater in arid regions during periods of drought.
• Decreasing available water flow in all river basins that have been assessed. Reductions will be greater in the most northern and southern
regions (the Limarí and Cautín Basins) while the remaining basins are projected to experience slight reductions in flow levels in the short-term
and significant reductions in the mid-term.
• Major increase in the number of months with a hydrologic deficit in practically all river basins, due to the projected changes in availability and
seasonal distribution of the water flows. This will greatly affect the availability of water resources, with low-flows occurring more frequently.
• Decreasing ecosystem services of surface and ground water will have a significant impact on the quality of water recourses. In general,
the water system’s capacity to dilute and regulate pollutants and liquid waste emissions will be reduced. In addition, increased frequency
of extreme events will degrade surface water quality.
• Increase in drought, especially in the northern and central regions. River overflows across the country due to El Niño Southern Oscillation
(ENSO) events.
• Negative impacts on ecosystems that depend on the quality and quantity of water resources. Water quality affects the natural conditions that
allow for the development of aquatic ecosystems and biodiversity. In addition, ecosystems that depend on groundwater supply will be affected.
✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ (impoverishment of
(decrease in average annual (degradation of surface water (increased water scarcity (drought, especially in aquatic life and alteration
river flows and recharge quality due to extreme and increased demand northern and central basins; of biodiversity depending
of groundwater; change events; groundwater from other sectors can river overflows across on groundwater availability)
in seasonal patterns salinisation in coastal zones; affect availability the country due
of snow melt) degradation of groundwater of drinking water) to ENSO events)
quality in northern areas;
decrease in the regulation
ability of water systems, such
as dilution of pollutants)
Key vulnerabilities • Northern and central Chile where water is already scarce and where considerable reductions in rainfall are expected.
• Chile has the highest continental concentration of glaciers in the Southern Hemisphere. In 2007, the country’s 1 835 glaciers composed a total
area of 15 500 km2.
• Chile has more than 20 000 km2 of ice reserves, 75 % of which is found in the northern and southern Patagonian Ice Fields.
Sources: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (2012), La Economía del Cambio Climático en Chile, www.eclac.cl/
publicaciones/xml/0/47220/La_economia_del_cambio_climatico_en_Chile_Completo.pdf (accessed 8 August 2012); Ministerio de Energía (2011),
Selección y Aplicación de un Modelo Hidrológico para estimar los Impactos del Cambio Climático en la Generación de Energía del Sistema Interconectado
Central, www.minenergia.cl/documentos/estudios/seleccion-y-aplicacion-de-un-modelo.html (accessed 10 September 2012); Ministerio del Medio
Ambiente (2011), Segunda Comunicación Nacional de Chile, http://unfccc.int/national_reports/non-annex_i_natcom/items/2979.php (accessed
22 June 2012); National Environmental Commission (CONAMA) (2010), Análisis de Vulnerabilidad de Recursos Hídricos frente a escenarios de
Cambio Climático para las cuencas Cautín, Aconcagua, Teno e Illapel, National Environmental Commission, Department of Climate Change;
National Environmental Commission (CONAMA) (2008), National Climate Change Action Plan for 2008-12, National Environmental
Commission, Department of Climate Change, www.mma.gob.cl/1304/articles-49744_Plan_02.pdf (accessed 15 September 2012).
Policy instruments
Policy mix Regulatory Economic Information
Areas instruments instruments and other instruments
Water quantity • Water Code (DFL 1122): Modification • National Plan for Climate Change
(pending approval) that introduces Education and Awareness: incorporating
changes to the Water Code, increasing the subject into curricula at all educational
fines and imprisonment for illegal water levels (Ministry of Education, planned).
extraction. Establishes penalties • Improved prediction and response
for noncompliance with the process for floods.
of executing transfers of water rights, • National irrigation strategy includes
according to the responsible bodies a plan considering the construction
(Notaries and Water Rights of 15 reservoirs in the long term,
Conservatives). Improvements in and 4 during the present administration
supervision of extractions and water in order to expand irrigation.
market are also expected. • The General Directorate of Water is
conducting studies to provide information
Water quality • Emission Norm for regulation of the about the feasibility of desalination plants.
pollutants associated with liquid waste
discharges to marine and continental
surface water (DS 90/2000,
of the Ministry of the Secretary General
of the Presidency).
• Emission Norm of liquid waste to ground
water (DS 46/2002, of the Ministry of the
Secretary General of the Presidency).1
1. These norms are the current instruments that provide assurance in terms of water quality. They could help to address the effects of
climate change on water quality due to decreases in flows.
2. Other secondary norms are in process of approval. These norms are instruments for protection of the ecosystems related to water
bodies and could reduce the negative effects of climate change.