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Water Supply and Allocation Issues in the Puget Sound Richard Palmer Michael Miller University of Washington Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Objective and Outline • What will be the climate and hydrology of the Puget Sound in 2020/2040 and what are the impacts of climate change on water supply issues? • How can mid-term forecasts improve management of water supplies for people and fish? Objective and Outline • What will be the climate and hydrology of the Puget Sound in 2020/2040 and what are the impacts of climate change on water supply issues? • How can mid-term forecasts improve management of water supplies for people and fish? Current state of climate modeling • Climate models are currently capable of credibly simulating present climate at the continental scale. • Models are continually improving, yet key physical relationships remain poorly understood, the water vapor/cloud formation and feedback process being the most significant. • Greater resolution and more complex parameterization of physical processes will continue as computing power increases and study continues. • Models are not predictions of future, but can be considered as credible simulations of a multitude of possible futures. GCMs - General Circulation Models • IPCC discusses 34 GCMs • Coupled Model Intercomparison Study examines 29 in more detail – Compares GCMs via historical observations for air temperature, precipitation, sea temperature, air pressure, ice extent. • We have selected nine of the more prominent models to demonstrate GCM selection process Model Developed by Reference CCSR/NIES2 Center for Climate System Research, University of Tokyo/National Institute for Environmental Studies Emori et al, 1999 CGCM2 Canadian Centre of Climate Modelling and Analysis Flato and Boer, 2001 CSIRO mk2 Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation Gordon and O’Farrell, 1997 CSM1.3 * NCAR – National Center for Atmospheric Research Boville et al., 2001 DOE PCM NCAR , US Department of Energy, Los Alamos, Naval Post Graduate Program, and US Army Corps of Engineers. Washington et al., 2000 ECHAM4 Netherlands center for Climate Research and Max Planck Institute (MPI) Roeckner et al., 1996 GFDL_R30 Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL) & NOAA Knutson et al., 1999 HadCM3 Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research Gordon et al., 2000 MRI2 Meteorological Research Institute (Numerical prediction Division) Yukimoto et al., 2000 Evaluation of Climate Change Climate Shift Meteorological Data Hydrology Model Demand Model Operations Model 2020 Climate Change Temperature Change for Climate Change Scenarios 4 2040 Climate Change 3.5 3 Degrees C Temperatures will increase by 2° C by 2040, with higher temperatures in the summer 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 Precipitation Fraction for Climate Change Scenarios 2020 Climate Change 0 1.2 2040 Climate Oct NovChange Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Fraction Precipitation 1.15 1.1 Precipitation will increase in the winter and decrease in the summer. 1.05 1 0.95 0.9 0.85 0.8 Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep DHSVM Distributed Hydrology-Soil-Vegetation Model Sultan River Inflows into Spada Reservoir Average Annual Hydrograph 2500 2000 Sultan Current Climate Sultan pcm3dec4 Sultan echam4dec4 Sultan had2dec4 Sultan had3dec4 cfs 1500 1000 500 0 Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Tolt River Inflows into Tolt Reservoir Average Annual Hydrograph 300 250 cfs 200 Tolt Current Climate Tolt pcm3dec4 Tolt echam4dec4 Tolt had2dec4 Tolt had3dec4 150 100 50 0 Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Cedar River Inflows into Chester Morse Reservoir Average Annual Hydrograph Cedar Current Climate Cedar pcm3dec4 Cedar echam4dec4 Cedar had2dec4 Cedar had3dec4 600 500 cfs 400 300 200 100 0 Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Green River Inflows into Howard Hansen Reservoir Average Annual Hydrograph Green Current Climate 2500 Green pcm3dec4 Green echam4dec4 Green had2dec4 Green had3dec4 2000 cfs 1500 1000 500 0 Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Ranked Cumulative Winter Flow (JFM) 2040 35000 Sultan Current Climate Sultan pcm3dec4 Sultan echam4dec4 Sultan had2dec4 Sultan had3dec4 30000 25000 cfsweeks 20000 15000 10000 43% 32% 5000 0 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 Ranked Cumulative Spring (AMJ) Flow 2040 25000 Sultan Current Climate Sultan pcm3dec4 Sultan echam4dec4 Sultan had2dec4 Sultan had3dec4 20000 15000 cfsweeks 10000 -30% 5000 0 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 Results – Impacts on Hydrology Percent difference from current climate cumulative seasonal flows JFM AMJ JFM AMJ 2020 2020 2040 2040 Mean Absolute Percent Difference Sultan 32 -18 43 -30 31 Tolt 16 -16 20 -21 18 Cedar 36 -23 49 -36 36 Green 28 -25 37 -37 32 Average 28 -20 37 -31 Conclusions • Climate impacts on the four basins’ hydrology are similar • Average percent difference in seasonal flows – 2020 Winter : 28% – 2040 Winter : 37% 2020 Spring : -20% 2040 Spring : -31% • Absolute average percent difference – – – – Sultan : 31% Tolt : 18% Cedar : 36% Green : 32% • Average supply system impact is 15-17% increase in System Use (surface storage, groundwater and/or system shortfalls) Climate Impact on Water Supply Average climate impact on Supply Used, Percent Difference from Current Climate Basin Max Min Avg Sultan 37 0 15 Cedar/Tolt 32 12 17 Green 28 2 16 Possible Reactions to Climate Change Information • Supply – Tacoma to Seattle Connection (2nd Supply Project) – Seattle to Everett Connection – Water Reuse • Demand – Conservation Measures – Pricing – Change Service Base Objective and Outline • What will be the climate and hydrology of the Puget Sound in 2020/2040 and what are the impacts of climate change on water supply issues? • How can mid-term forecasts improve management of water supplies for people and fish? Why do a Forecast? • 6-month forecast applied to the PRISM models • Usefulness of forecasts – Why forecasts are useful – Who could use the forecasts • How are the forecasts developed • Examples of the forecasts • Future direction with the forecasts N Renton TSI Auburn Applying 6-month Forecast • Prior to a forecast – Water management decisions • 50 years of meteorological records • 73 years water supply and demand records • With a forecast – Water management decisions based on potential future conditions • Forecast continue using DHSVM and CRYSTAL for water supply and management PRISM Usefulness of Forecast • For policymakers – M&I Demands • During below average conditions – Improve timing of water restrictions – Provide more information as to the type of restriction – HCPs • During above average conditions – Determine amount and length of large flow releases • During below average conditions – Revise timing of releases to minimize habitat damage Usefulness of the Forecast • For water managers – During average and above average flow • Forecast potential of these resources • Discharge necessary to meet future flood control – During below average flows • Forecast initial drought conditions a couple months sooner • In the early summer months, forecasts could indicate when fall and winter flows will increase Forecast Development • Developed by Andy Wood, Edwin Maurer, Arun Kumar, and Dennis Lettenmaier • NCEP Data – Bias Correction – Downscaling • DHSVM NCEP Data • National Center for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) – Global Spectral Models (GSMs) – Hindcasts • Temperature and precipitation • 10 initial conditions • 21 years (79 – 99) – Forecasts • 20 ensembles • 6-month forecast Bias Correction Downscaling • Forecasted meteorological data – Based on month from the historic 21-year record (79-99), most similar precipitation – Precipitation is scaled (multiplicative process) – Temperature is shifted (additive process) • Preformed to each month of each ensemble DHSVM • Distributed Hydrologic Soil Vegetation Model (DHSVM) • Most recent year of actual data run prior to the forecast – To have the model set for the forecasted data. – Keep model run time reasonable DHSVM Output • 20 forecasts of stream flow • Forecasts are compared to historic average flows • Comparison used to forecast higher or lower then average flow. June Forecast – Cedar June Forecast - Cedar 20000 18000 Ave. Monthly Flow (afw) 16000 14000 12000 10000 8000 6000 4000 2000 0 Apr-01 Jul-01 Nov-01 Feb-02 May-02 Months (June, 01 to Dec., 02) Sep-02 Dec-02 Mar-03 Actual Historic Max. Historic Ave. Forecast Aver. Historic Min Esmbl1 Esmbl 2 Esmbl 3 Esmbl 4 Esmbl 5 Esmbl 6 Esmbl 7 Esmbl 8 Esmbl 9 Esmbl 10 Esmbl 11 Esmbl 12 Esmbl 13 Esmbl 14 Esmbl 15 Ensmbl 16 Ensmbl 17 Ensmbl 18 Ensmbl 19 Ensmbl 20 June Forecast - Cedar 20000 18000 Ave. Monthly Flow (afw) 16000 14000 Forecast Aver. Actual Historic Max. Historic Min Historic Ave. Forecast Start 12000 10000 8000 6000 4000 2000 0 Apr-01 Jul-01 Nov-01 Feb-02 May-02 Months Sep-02 Dec-02 Mar-03 Summary • Climate Change – Initial results suggest significant impacts on water supply – Lower summer flows will challenge releases for both fish and folks – New management strategies are necessary – Future planning should include this impact Summary on Forecasting • Forecasting with longer-range climate indicators offers promise Past forecasts did not provide sufficient lead time for certain times of year • Will have on line forecasts this quarter