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Climate change in the Colorado River Basin: Water management implications Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University.

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Presentation on theme: "Climate change in the Colorado River Basin: Water management implications Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Climate change in the Colorado River Basin: Water management implications Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Washington Ninth SAHRA Annual Meeting Tucson September 23, 2009

2 Barnett and Pierce (WRR 2008, “When will Lake Mead go dry?”)  Lakes Mead and Powell treated as a single storage unit  Initial condition: live storage as of June 2007 (25.7 MAF).  Storage in each reservoir assumed approximately equal  Baseline mean net inflow 15 MAF

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4 Deterministic analysis: Constant inflow (initially 15 MAF/yr) with linear decrease to new assumed mean (10-30% reduction) Stochastic analysis: Assumes various models of time- varying inflows, with same long-term trends as in deterministic analysis

5 From Barnett and Pierce, WRR 2008

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8 From Barnett and Pierce, PNAS 2009

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11 Cumulative Probability 510509095 1 0000.280.6 2 0000.751.08 3 0001.11.7 4 0002.13 CDFs of R4 (cumulative shortfalls over 30 years) for scenarios with Cv = 0.5, G = 0.75, C = 2.0, D = 0.8 (all units are number of mean annual reservoir inflows). Reservoir initial contents were lesser of first year’s inflow or capacity. 1: h = 0.5, ρ = 0.0 2. h = 0.6, ρ = 0.15 3. h = 0.7, ρ = 0.2 4. h = 0.8, ρ = 0.4

12 The main issue: D/μ approaching or exceeding 1? “We emphasize that while D = 0.8 represents a severe demand level … it will likely become more common in the future” (Burges and Lettenmaier, 1982)

13 Storage Reservoirs Run of River Reservoirs CRRM Basin storage aggregated into 4 storage reservoirs –Lake Powell and Lake Mead have 85% of basin storage Reservoir evaporation = f(reservoir surface area, mean monthly temperature) Hydropower = f(release, reservoir elevation) Monthly timestep Historic Streamflows to Validate Projected Inflows to assess future performance of system Christensen et al (Climataic Change, 2004)

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15 Total Basin Storage

16 Conclusions The main issue is that the system is approaching the intersection where D/μ > 1. When that occurs, “failures” are inevitable. D is increasing, and μ may be decreasing, accelerating the rate at which the intersection is being approached. Differences in various studies have to do with accounting for D (e.g., contingent reductions based on Lake Mead level) and μ (e.g., accounting for reservoir evaporation, bank storage, flow below Lees Ferry. It seems likely that the intersection will be reached within the next ~25 years – pessimistic assumptions say it may have already happened, optimistic assumptions push the date out a few decades All of the analyses are based on physical considerations only, and assume in particular that D is a hard number. In fact, if a “ soft landing ” is to be achieved, water allocation mechanisms (e.g. the entire structure of compacts, treaties, and legal decisions) will have to be revisited.


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