Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dspace.iiti.ac.in/handle/123456789/6359
Title: Balancing Flood Risk and Water Supply in California: Policy Search Integrating Short-Term Forecast Ensembles With Conjunctive Use
Authors: Nayak, Munir Ahmad
Keywords: Binary trees;Flood control;Floods;Forecasting;Groundwater;Underground reservoirs;Water conservation;Water supply;Conjunctive use;Groundwater storage;Hydro climatologies;Multipurpose reservoirs;Operating policies;Reservoir operation;Short-term forecasts;Statistical framework;Weather forecasting;atmospheric moisture;flood;flood control;groundwater;policy approach;risk;water supply;weather forecasting;California;Folsom Lake;United States
Issue Date: 2018
Publisher: Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Citation: Nayak, M. A., Herman, J. D., & Steinschneider, S. (2018). Balancing flood risk and water supply in california: Policy search integrating short-term forecast ensembles with conjunctive use. Water Resources Research, 54(10), 7557-7576. doi:10.1029/2018WR023177
Abstract: Short-term weather forecasts have the potential to improve reservoir operations for both flood control and water supply objectives, especially in regions currently relying on fixed seasonal flood pools to mitigate risk. The successful development of forecast-based policies should integrate uncertainty from modern forecast products to create unambiguous rules that can be tested on out-of-sample periods. This study investigates the potential for such operating policies to improve water supply efficiency while maintaining flood protection, combining state-of-the-art weather hindcasts with downstream conjunctive use to transfer surplus flood releases to groundwater storage. Because available weather hindcasts are relatively short (10–20 years), we propose a novel statistical framework to develop synthetic forecasts over longer periods of the historical record. Operating rules are trained with a recently developed policy search framework in which decision rules are structured as binary trees. Policies are developed for a range of scenarios with varying forecast skill and conjunctive use capacity, using Folsom Reservoir, California, as a case study. Results suggest that the combination of conjunctive use and short-term weather forecasts can substantially improve both water supply and flood control objectives by allowing storage to remain high until forecasts trigger a release. Further, increased conjunctive use capacity reduces the importance of forecast skill, since surface storage can be moved to groundwater during the flood season without losing water supply. This analysis serves the development of forecast-based operating policies for large, multipurpose reservoirs in California and other regions with similar flood hydroclimatology. ©2018. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
URI: https://doi.org/10.1029/2018WR023177
https://dspace.iiti.ac.in/handle/123456789/6359
ISSN: 0043-1397
Type of Material: Journal Article
Appears in Collections:Department of Civil Engineering

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