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Towards the comparative analysis of the case studies: operative steps Carlo Giupponi 1,2 and Gretel Gambarelli 2,3 1 Università degli Studi di Milano 2.

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Presentation on theme: "Towards the comparative analysis of the case studies: operative steps Carlo Giupponi 1,2 and Gretel Gambarelli 2,3 1 Università degli Studi di Milano 2."— Presentation transcript:

1 Towards the comparative analysis of the case studies: operative steps Carlo Giupponi 1,2 and Gretel Gambarelli 2,3 1 Università degli Studi di Milano 2 FEEM 3 PhD, Università Ca’ Foscari di Venezia SMART Workshop Tunis September 2004

2 2 “Cooking” a comparative analysis 5 very different CS Models inputs Models outputs Metadata (WP04) 3 scenarios Policy responses The ingredients COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS The dish DPSIR framework Sustainability indicators The receipt

3 3 How to cook this dish? Option 1 - more rigorous - more ambitious Option 2 - less rigorous - less ambitious The difference between option 1 and 2 is about the relationship between scenarios and responses and the number of necessary models runnings

4 4 WP10 objectives  To identify commonalities and differences and relate them to the specific regional setting;  To identify more generally applicable results that are invariant across the case studies;  To organize these finding in terms of a comparative policy assessment (existing and desirable, future ones) and best practice examples – contribution to sustainability.

5 5 OPTION 1: 5 OPERATIVE STEPS 1) Definition of scenarios 2) Definition of responses (E,F) 3) Definition of sustainability indicators 4) We run the 3 scenarios with existing responses 5) We run the 3 scenarios with desirable future responses CA on existing policies for each scenario CA on proposed policies for each scenario

6 6 OPTION 1: step 1 1) Scenarios are defined by COMMON VARIABLES representing DRIVING FORCES of all CS (Climate, Population, Land Use), NOT INCLUDING WATER POLICY RESPONSES.

7 7 OPTION 1: STEP 2 2) Responses are organized in COMMON CATEGORIES for all CS (Water Demand, Water Supply, Water Quality), but single responses are SPECIFIC per CS (PARTICIPATION OF STAKEHOLDERS).

8 8 OPTION 1: STEP 3 3) Indicators for the CA are COMMON to all CS and address the 3 pillars of sustainability (Economy, Society, Environment) + cross-cutting themes

9 9 OPTION 1: STEP 4 4) Models are first run for the 3 scenarios, with the CURRENT RESPONSES for all CS. Values of sustainability indicators are derived. The COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS assesses how current responses perform in different case studies in each scenario. Policy questions to be answered: How effective are existing water policies with respect to the management of water supply, water demand and water quality? What are the current effects of existing water policies on economic performances, the quality of life, the environmental quality? Are the abstractions from our water resources sustainable over the long term? What are the differences and communalities in current practices of the 5 CS?

10 10 WP10: STEP 5 5) Models are run PER EACH SCENARIO, PER EACH CATEGORY OF RESPONSES. Each response impacts on a pressure or a state indicator, thus modifying models’ inputs. Values of sustainability indicators are derived. The COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS assesses how common types of future responses perform in different case studies in each scenario. Policy questions to be answered: How effective are proposed water policies with respect to the current practices in improving the management of water supply, water demand and water quality? How effective are proposed water policies with respect to the current practices in improving economic performances, the quality of life, the ecological quality? Are the abstractions from our water resources sustainable over the long term if the proposed policies are implemented? What are the differences and communalities in proposed practices of the 5 CS?

11 11 OPTION 1: MODELS RUNNING 3x4 = 12 runnings of models per each CS 12 different results registered by sustainability indicators 3 scenarios, 1 Existing +3 Future Responses (WD, WS, WQ) Hence, for each CS:

12 12 OPTION 1: pros and cons PROS: - there is a LOGICAL DISTINCTION between external variables (i.e. climate conditions, population growth, etc.) and decision variables (i.e. water policies). - more consistent with DPSIR: D define scenarios, for each scenario we have different effects on P,S,I indicators and R try to improve P, S, I indicators CONS: - rather complex - many models runnings

13 13 WP10: EXAMPLE EXAMPLE: Evaluation of one sustainability indicator (D/S ratio for agriculture): 1 scenario (pessimistic) 1 variable defining scenario (share of irrigated agricultural land) 1 type of response (water demand management. In particular: sprinkler irrigation)

14 14 DF: Increased share of irrigated agricultural land PESSIMISTIC SCENARIO INDICATORBASELINEBAUOPTPESS Share of irrigated area 50% 0%-3%+5% LUC MODEL

15 15 P: Increase in water demand for agriculture DF: Increased share of irrigated agricultural land P m 3 /year Water demand for agriculture Current irrigation methods, crops etc. Possibilities for the derivation of sectoral water demand: - water demand derived through a decision table having land use and population growth as inputs - direct derivation of water demands (coherent with land-use). In both cases the sum of sectoral water demands should be equal to the regional water demand for each scenario, as calculated by the LUC model.

16 16 P: Water demand for agriculture DF: Increase in irrigated surface S: Total water availability for agriculture WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT MODEL S Total water availability for agriculture m 3 /y Aggregation of daily data Allocation strategies & other inputs

17 17 I: D/S ratio in agriculture P: Water demand for agriculture DF: Increase in irrigated surface S: Total water availability for agriculture S Total water availabilityMC/y WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT MODEL I D/S ratio in agriculture % P Water demand for agriculture MC/Y Input for CA of existing responses

18 18 P: Increase in Water demand for agriculture DF: Increase in irrigated surface S: total water availability for agriculture I: D/S ratio in agriculture decreases P: Increase in Water demand for agriculture Input for CA of future WDM responses R: Sprinkler use P: Decrease in Water demand for agriculture S: Total water availability for agriculture unchanged I: D/S ratio in agriculture improves

19 19 OPTION 2: OPERATIVE STEPS 1) Definition of scenarios, including responses 2) Definition of sustainability indicators 4) BAU scenario (including existing responses) 6) Optimistic scenario (including desirable future responses) Answer to policy questions 6) Pessimistic scenario (including undesirable future responses)

20 20 OPTION 2: pros and cons CONS: - NO LOGICAL DISTINCTION between external variables (i.e. climate conditions, population growth, etc.) and decision variables (i.e. water policies). - less consistent with DPSIR: D and R are mixed in defining scenarios, so the effect of R on P,S.I indicators is less transparent because other variables (climate, population, etc.) change at the same time PROS: - less complex - less models runnings

21 21 Discussion…. For both option 1 and option 2 we have to agree on - scenarios - responses (included or not in scenarios) - sustainability indicators

22 22 1) SCENARIOS TELEMAC: - sources of pollution - type of pollution - concentration of pollution WATERWARE: Metadata (WP04)? - Income increase per sector - Per capita water consumption by sector, etc.

23 23 2) RESPONSES

24 24 3) SUSTAINABILITY INDICATORS UATLA presentation SOGREAH presentation


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