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Some thoughts on SWOT water resources applications Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Washington WaTER/SWOT.

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Presentation on theme: "Some thoughts on SWOT water resources applications Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Washington WaTER/SWOT."— Presentation transcript:

1 Some thoughts on SWOT water resources applications Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Washington WaTER/SWOT SWG meeting Paris February 1, 2008

2 What are the challenges in global water management? Population growth and lifestyle change, leading to increased water demand Transboundary conflicts Environmental change –Land Cover –Climate

3 Forest/Woodland Shrubland/grassland Cropland 1990s land cover (U MD)Global Potential Vegetation (Ramankutty and Foley) Uruguay River basin land cover change – potential vegetation vs 1990s

4 Land cover change in the Mekong River basin

5 Qori Kalis Glacier, Peru 1978 and 2002. Visual courtesy of Lonnie Thompson, from Barnett et al (Nature, 2005)

6 Impacts of reservoirs on the water cycle? ~1900 2000 Construction of dams has vastly altered the water cycle by: Altering the seasonal cycle, and annual amount of discharge (6 major global rivers, including the Colorado, no longer flow at their mouths) Increasing the time of travel through the channel system Changing the quality of rivers, and constituents and physical characteristics of continental river discharge Transporting water within and between rivers basins, and altering its partitioning (usually meaning increased evapotranspiration)

7 Some examples Columbia River at the Dalles, OR

8 Opportunities Time series (in near-real time) of elevation, and storage (utilizing surface area as well as stage) of major global reservoirs (note ~2500 in ICOLD data set of large global dams, but ~80,000 in U.S. Army COE data base for U.S. reservoirs Action: evaluate set of global reservoirs for which such a data set would be feasible (considering surrounding topography, etc.), and evaluate potential for developing storage/elevation relationships over the mission duration

9 Time series (in near-real time) of inflow (and/or outflow) to selected major global reservoirs Action: Evaluate feasibility, number, location

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11 ESA River and Lakes data set (primarily EnviSat/ERS-2) Visuals courtesy Jerome Benveniste, ESA

12 Evolving potential for global real-time drought characterization (and prediction) – is there an analogous potential for reservoir storage? Visual courtesy Eric Wood, Princeton University

13 Policy analysis of implications of near-real time reservoir storage data on management of transboundary rivers Action: need someone to take this on

14 Demonstration project for large river flooding? –Most property damage and loss of life comes from large river (and coastal) flooding (as opposed to flash floods). WaTER flood extent and altimetry should provide basis for updating (via data assimilation) flood forecast models –Action: Evaluate feasibility and mechanism (problem: there’s always a flood somewhere, but we don’t know where in advance). Possibly partner with a global forecast center?

15 Applications studies/demos for coastal oceanography Storm surge/flooding Estuarine (and near coastal) circulation/water quality Opportunities for data assimilation? Action: prioritize, need someone to take on this area


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