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Modeling Urban Water Management: Using Climate Change Information . Margaret Hahn and Richard Palmer University of Washington Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Contents. Project Area and Background Interconnection of Everett, Seattle and Tacoma Project process
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Modeling Urban Water Management: Using Climate Change Information Margaret Hahn and Richard Palmer University of Washington Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Contents • Project Area and Background • Interconnection of Everett, Seattle and Tacoma • Project process • Linked models • Results of Reservoir Management model • Annual minimum storage • Impacts on planning process • Existing plans may not be sufficient
Revised from Nelligan-Doran, 1999 Lake Washington Lake Youngs SEATTLE Cedar Reservoir SKCRWA TSI Pipeline 5 HAH Reservoir Pipeline 1 Pipeline 4 N TACOMA Pipeline 2 Tacoma Seattle Intertie
Everett Pipelines 2-4 Pipeline 5 Spada Lake Reservoir Clearview Pipeline Proposed ESI Alignment Snohomish County King County TPL 1 TPL 2 Tolt Reservoir Seattle N ESSL Everett Seattle Intertie
Planning and Management Analysis • 2020 and 2040 forecasted demands • 2020 and 2040 climate change based stream flows • PCM • ECHAM • Status quo system configuration • Tacoma Seattle Intertie • Everett Seattle Intertie
Overall Analysis Process Precip and temp DHSVM Historic vs Simulated Downscaled GCM CRYSTAL model • Meteorological data • Hydrology model • Calibration • Climate Shift • Impacts Evaluation
CRYSTALCascade Regional Yield Simulation and Analysis Model • Simulation model of Puget Sound water supply • Considers future demands, policies, supplies and infrastructures • Uses weekly time step • Developed in Powersim
Planning and Management Analysis • 2020 and 2040 forecasted demands • 2020 and 2040 climate change based stream flows • PCM • ECHAM • Status quo system configuration • Tacoma Seattle Intertie • Everett Seattle Intertie
Results • Compare • minimum annual storage • number of shortfalls • duration of shortfalls • Reliability • 43 year record • any shortfall is considered a failure • no demand modification
Annual Reliability 76% 83% 23% 40% 100% 95% 23% 38% Status Quo TS Intertie TS & ES Intertie
Planning Implications • Ongoing regional planning efforts are important • TSI will provide only a portion of supply needed • Climate change results imply regional needs for cooperation and new approaches • Without new supply or dramatic changes in demand, system reliability will be unacceptable