Preparing municipal water system planning for a changing climate: Integrating climate‐sensitive demand estimates

Author:

Johnson Ryan C.1ORCID,Burian Steven J.2,Halgren James1,Irons Trevor3,Baur Emily4,Aziz Danyal2ORCID,Hassan Daniyal4ORCID,Li Jiada5,Kirkham Tracie6,Stewart Jessie6,Briefer Laura6

Affiliation:

1. Alabama Water Institute University of Alabama Tuscaloosa Alabama USA

2. Civil, Construction and Environmental Engineering University of Alabama Tuscaloosa Alabama USA

3. Montana Technical University Butte Montana USA

4. Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Utah Salt Lake City Utah USA

5. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Colorado State University Fort Collins Colorado USA

6. Salt Lake City Department of Public Utilities Salt Lake City Utah USA

Abstract

AbstractSeasonality and a changing climate exert strong influences on supply and demand in the western United States, challenging municipal water system (MWS) management. Although supply and demand exhibit characteristics of nonstationarity, the commonly used econometric‐based models to estimate demands discount the influences of climate variability and trends in seasonal MWS vulnerability assessments. Given the projected impacts of climate change on water resources, we use the documented performance of a real‐world MWS with a calibrated systems model to investigate how demands modeled with and without the influences of climate impact system vulnerability indicators—determined by the exceedance of historical daily mean imported water—for MWS planning guidance. Neglecting climatic influences on MWS demands, the model overestimates the volume of imported water by up to 50% and misclassifies vulnerabilities during supply‐limiting conditions. The climate‐sensitive demand estimates reduced model error (i.e., <3% error) and correctly categorized vulnerabilities. Moreover, the MWS exhibited an average threefold greater sensitivity to percent changes in demand relative to percent changes in supply. The sensitivity to variances in demand emphasizes the need to account for factors influencing supply and demand when investigating the impacts of a changing climate, suggesting future research to examine the coupled influences of modeled supply and demand accuracy on MWS performance.

Funder

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology,Ecology

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