Uncertainty Decomposition to Understand the Influence of Water Systems Model Error in Climate Vulnerability Assessments

Author:

Steinschneider Scott1ORCID,Herman Jonathan D.2ORCID,Kucharski John3ORCID,Abellera Marriah4,Ruggiero Peter5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering Cornell University Ithaca NY USA

2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of California, Davis Davis CA USA

3. Engineering Research and Development Center U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Washington DC USA

4. Institute for Water Resources U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Washington DC USA

5. College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences Oregon State University Corvallis OR USA

Abstract

AbstractClimate vulnerability assessments rely on water infrastructure system models that imperfectly predict performance metrics under ensembles of future scenarios. There is a benefit to reduced complexity system representations to support these assessments, especially when large ensembles are used to better characterize future uncertainties. An important question is whether the total uncertainty in the output metrics is primarily attributable to the climate ensemble or to the systems model itself. Here we develop a method to address this question by combining time series error models of performance metrics with time‐varying Sobol sensitivity analysis. The method is applied to a reduced complexity multi‐reservoir systems model of the Sacramento‐San Joaquin River Basin in California to demonstrate the decomposition of flood risk and water supply uncertainties under an ensemble of climate change scenarios. The results show that the contribution of systems model error to total uncertainty is small (∼5%–15%) relative to climate based uncertainties. This indicates that the reduced complexity systems model is sufficiently accurate for use in the context of the vulnerability assessment. We also observe that climate uncertainty is dominated by the choice of general circulation model and its interactive effects with the representative concentration pathway (RCP), rather than the RCP alone. This observation has implications for how climate vulnerabilities should be interpreted.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Water Science and Technology

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