Vulnerability and risk: climate change and water supply from California’s Central Valley water system

被引:0
|
作者
Patrick Ray
Sungwook Wi
Andrew Schwarz
Matthew Correa
Minxue He
Casey Brown
机构
[1] University of Cincinnati,Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering
[2] University of Massachusetts,Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
[3] Delta Stewardship Council,undefined
[4] California Department of Water Resources,undefined
来源
Climatic Change | 2020年 / 161卷
关键词
California Central Valley; Climate change; Water year type; Hydrologic model; Decision scaling;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Water allocation institutions globally must operate within legal and political contexts established by precedent and codified in operating rules, even as they flex and adjust to climate change. California’s Central Valley Water System (CVS) is a prime example. Recent global, national, regional, and local climate change assessments have highlighted climate-change-driven impacts on the CVS; however, these previous studies have not discussed the relative likelihood of performance decline, making it difficult to use the information for planning. In response, this paper presents a systematic climate change stress test that utilizes a physically based hydrologic model linked with a water resources system model representing the infrastructure, operations, and policy constraints of the interconnected system of natural river channels and man-made facilities that comprise the CVS. The results provide a summary of the sensitivity of the system to climate change, indicating the specific climate changes that cause performance of the system to decline below historical norms, and an estimation of the General Circulation Model (GCM) informed probability of those changes by 2050. Degraded performance is especially likely for State Water Project (SWP) deliveries (> 85%), and September carryover/drought storage in the Oroville Reservoir (the SWP’s largest reservoir, ~ 95% likely to degrade). A decline in Net Delta Outflow is likely in all seasons except summer and early fall (when regulations require supplemental releases to combat salinity from sea level rise). For most of these metrics, the modeled performance drop is more severe in dry years than in wet years.
引用
收藏
页码:177 / 199
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Vulnerability and risk: climate change and water supply from California's Central Valley water system
    Ray, Patrick
    Wi, Sungwook
    Schwarz, Andrew
    Correa, Matthew
    He, Minxue
    Brown, Casey
    [J]. CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2020, 161 (01) : 177 - 199
  • [2] Identifying climate change impacts on surface water supply in the southern Central Valley, California
    Liu, Zhu
    Herman, Jonathan D.
    Huang, Guobiao
    Kadir, Tariq
    Dahlke, Helen E.
    [J]. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2021, 759
  • [3] Modifying agricultural water management to adapt to climate change in California’s central valley
    Brian A. Joyce
    Vishal K. Mehta
    David R. Purkey
    Larry L. Dale
    Michael Hanemann
    [J]. Climatic Change, 2011, 109 : 299 - 316
  • [4] Modifying agricultural water management to adapt to climate change in California's central valley
    Joyce, Brian A.
    Mehta, Vishal K.
    Purkey, David R.
    Dale, Larry L.
    Hanemann, Michael
    [J]. CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2011, 109 : 299 - 316
  • [5] The downside risk of climate change in California's Central Valley agricultural sector
    Hanemann, Michael
    Sayre, Susan Stratton
    Dale, Larry
    [J]. CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2016, 137 (1-2) : 15 - 27
  • [6] The downside risk of climate change in California’s Central Valley agricultural sector
    Michael Hanemann
    Susan Stratton Sayre
    Larry Dale
    [J]. Climatic Change, 2016, 137 : 15 - 27
  • [7] Vulnerability of Mexico City's water supply sources in the context of climate change
    Martinez, Sandra
    Kralisch, Stefanie
    Escolero, Oscar
    Perevochtchikova, Maria
    [J]. JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE, 2015, 6 (03) : 518 - 533
  • [8] Sacramento and San Joaquin Basins Study: Assessing Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation Strategies in California's Central Valley Water System
    Tansey, Michael
    Van Lienden, Brian J.
    Munevar, Armin
    Das, Tapash
    Nickel, Arlan
    [J]. WORLD ENVIRONMENTAL AND WATER RESOURCES CONGRESS 2017: WATERSHED MANAGEMENT, IRRIGATION AND DRAINAGE, AND WATER RESOURCES PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT, 2017, : 558 - 566
  • [9] Assessing vulnerability to climate change for total organic carbon in a system of drinking water supply
    Hashempour, Yalda
    Nasseri, Mohsen
    Mohseni-Bandpei, Anoushirvan
    Motesaddi, Saeed
    Eslamizadeh, Mohsen
    [J]. SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY, 2020, 53
  • [10] Vulnerability of water resource management to climate change: Application to a Pyrenean valley
    Huang, Peng
    Sauquet, Eric
    Vidal, Jean-Philippe
    Da Riba, Natacha
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY-REGIONAL STUDIES, 2022, 44