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Managing Western Water as Climate Changes Denver, CO February 20-21, 2008.

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Presentation on theme: "Managing Western Water as Climate Changes Denver, CO February 20-21, 2008."— Presentation transcript:

1 Managing Western Water as Climate Changes Denver, CO February 20-21, 2008

2 “Lake Mead May Go Dry By 2021 ” - LA Times - Las Vegas Sun

3 Shortage Criteria for the Lower Colorado River Basin

4 , What do users want? What is available? What is needed from R&D? What is possible? Current Forecast/ Monitoring Products What is potentially predictable/observable Spectrum of User Needs

5 Thanks to…..

6 DECISIONS Project Operations Schedule and execute all facility operations to store, release, and divert water for all project purposes, including hydropower generation and water deliveries for irrigation, municipal supplies, environmental purposes, recreation, and (with USACE) flood control. –Within constraints of state water laws and compacts, international treaties, etc Plan annual operations based upon forecasts of supply and demand and the competing priorities for water use.

7 Project Planning (including for changes in existing Operations) Plan new water projects, long-term operations, or changes in operations of existing projects. Forecast basin inflows, water demands, water storage, releases and deliveries, power generation, reservoir levels, downstream effects, groundwater effects, environmental, economic, social, and recreation consequences. Carry out these studies in compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act, the Endangered Species Act, and numerous other Federal and State regulations requiring use of best available information.

8 Dam Safety Regularly assess and mitigate, using a risk-based approach, potential hazards to the integrity of all Reclamation structures whose failure could cause loss of life and economic damages. Potential hazards include extreme hydrologic events.

9 Environmental Resources Management Restore, enhance, provide, or maintain, aquatic or riparian habitat, principally for threatened and endangered species (e.g., salmon, steelhead, bull trout, pike minnow, humpback chub, pallid sturgeon, willow flycatcher, piping plover, whooping crane) and waterfowl to comply with environmental laws, legislation, and court rulings. Prevent the spread of aquatic and riparian invasives, remove them, and restore habitat. Decide where to invest limited resources for restoration based on expected future conditions. –manage stream flows for water temperature, habitat, and passage –facilitate fish access to presently inaccessible habitat –restore spawning, rearing, migration, and other important habitats. –manage peak flows, sediment transport, and geomorphology –restore channels and associated habitats –restore wetlands –restore and maintain native vegetation types

10 Information Wishes Future Climate Scenarios Probabilities of emission paths? Which climate models should be used? Demand Forecasting Improved short-term forecasts (e.g., 3- month) of water demand Long-range forecasts of changes in water use and demand

11 Water Supply/Runoff Forecasting Intra-Annual –Volume Forecasting reflective of changing climate –Timing Forecasting reflective of chaning climate 2-5 year outlooks in volumes and timing relevant to climate state Longer than 5 Year Projections –Method for adjusting historic flows to reflect past or projected climate change –“Basin-scale” or “project-relevant” climate change information –Forecasts of climate change impacts on groundwater supplies Improved estimates of probability associated with all water supply forecasts

12 Environmental Impacts of Climate Change Climate impacts on threatened and endangered species Climate impacts on species-relevant indicators, e.g, flow volumes and timing, reservoir levels, temperature regimes and stratification, and other biologically- important river, riparian, and reservoir characteristics. Climate impacts on watershed landscapes, e.g, fire, sedimentation, runoff, invasives, groundwater. Climate impacts on the biology/productivity of oceans, estuaries, river systems Climate change triggering new species listings Opportunities for reducing impacts of climate change on species and habitats. Reclamation operations’ effects on climate?

13 Dam Safety/Flood Operations Knowing the effect of climate change on dam safety risk, as climate change could affect possible extreme hydrologic events and flood frequencies. Knowing the effects of moving climate on flood control rule curves (~30-year moving antecedent period) Social/Economics Impacts Predictions of climate impacts on the broader human environment

14 Climate Information Quality Understandable, explainable to managers, solicitors, public, water users Widely accepted (have scientific credibility, can't be a hotly debated method, approach) Relatively affordable Incorporated using "in-house" expertise Adaptable to changing planning objectives and constraints Adding value, not just more complexity and uncertainty, to the decision Information has some "stationarity“ (Curt’s joke)

15 Chuck Clarke, Seattle PUD


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