A Systems Approach to Municipal Water Portfolio Security: A Case Study of the Phoenix Metropolitan Area

We present a rigorous quantitative, systems-based model to measure a municipality’s water portfolio security using four objectives: Sustainability, Resilience, Vulnerability, and Cost (SRVC). Water engineers and planners can operationalize this simple model using readily available data to capture di...

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Main Authors: Richard R. Rushforth, Maggie Messerschmidt, Benjamin L. Ruddell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-06-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/6/1663
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spelling doaj-2f04c5e5924848ea8c165ef8329144962020-11-25T03:11:51ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412020-06-01121663166310.3390/w12061663A Systems Approach to Municipal Water Portfolio Security: A Case Study of the Phoenix Metropolitan AreaRichard R. Rushforth0Maggie Messerschmidt1Benjamin L. Ruddell2School of Informatics, Computing, and Cyber Systems, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ 86011, USAICF, 9300 Lee Highway, Fairfax, VA 22031, USASchool of Informatics, Computing, and Cyber Systems, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ 86011, USAWe present a rigorous quantitative, systems-based model to measure a municipality’s water portfolio security using four objectives: Sustainability, Resilience, Vulnerability, and Cost (SRVC). Water engineers and planners can operationalize this simple model using readily available data to capture dimensions of water security that go far beyond typical reliability and cost analysis. We implement this model for the Phoenix Metropolitan Area under several scenarios to assess multi-objective water security outcomes at the municipal-level and metropolitan area-level to water shocks and drought. We find the benefits of adaptive water security policies are dependent on a municipality’s predominant water source, calling for a variegated approach to water security planning across a tightly interrelated metropolitan area. Additionally, we find little correlation between sustainability, resilience, and vulnerability versus cost. Therefore, municipalities can enhance water security along cost-neutral, adaptive policy pathways. Residential water conservation and upstream flow augmentation are cost-effective policies to improve water security that also improve sustainability, resilience, and vulnerability and are adequate adaptations to a short-term Colorado River shortage. The Phoenix Metropolitan Area’s resilience to drought is higher than that of any of its constituent municipalities, underscoring the benefits of coordinated water planning at the metropolitan area-level.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/6/1663water policywater portfolio planningwater resources managementsystems assessmentadaptive capacity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Richard R. Rushforth
Maggie Messerschmidt
Benjamin L. Ruddell
spellingShingle Richard R. Rushforth
Maggie Messerschmidt
Benjamin L. Ruddell
A Systems Approach to Municipal Water Portfolio Security: A Case Study of the Phoenix Metropolitan Area
Water
water policy
water portfolio planning
water resources management
systems assessment
adaptive capacity
author_facet Richard R. Rushforth
Maggie Messerschmidt
Benjamin L. Ruddell
author_sort Richard R. Rushforth
title A Systems Approach to Municipal Water Portfolio Security: A Case Study of the Phoenix Metropolitan Area
title_short A Systems Approach to Municipal Water Portfolio Security: A Case Study of the Phoenix Metropolitan Area
title_full A Systems Approach to Municipal Water Portfolio Security: A Case Study of the Phoenix Metropolitan Area
title_fullStr A Systems Approach to Municipal Water Portfolio Security: A Case Study of the Phoenix Metropolitan Area
title_full_unstemmed A Systems Approach to Municipal Water Portfolio Security: A Case Study of the Phoenix Metropolitan Area
title_sort systems approach to municipal water portfolio security: a case study of the phoenix metropolitan area
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2020-06-01
description We present a rigorous quantitative, systems-based model to measure a municipality’s water portfolio security using four objectives: Sustainability, Resilience, Vulnerability, and Cost (SRVC). Water engineers and planners can operationalize this simple model using readily available data to capture dimensions of water security that go far beyond typical reliability and cost analysis. We implement this model for the Phoenix Metropolitan Area under several scenarios to assess multi-objective water security outcomes at the municipal-level and metropolitan area-level to water shocks and drought. We find the benefits of adaptive water security policies are dependent on a municipality’s predominant water source, calling for a variegated approach to water security planning across a tightly interrelated metropolitan area. Additionally, we find little correlation between sustainability, resilience, and vulnerability versus cost. Therefore, municipalities can enhance water security along cost-neutral, adaptive policy pathways. Residential water conservation and upstream flow augmentation are cost-effective policies to improve water security that also improve sustainability, resilience, and vulnerability and are adequate adaptations to a short-term Colorado River shortage. The Phoenix Metropolitan Area’s resilience to drought is higher than that of any of its constituent municipalities, underscoring the benefits of coordinated water planning at the metropolitan area-level.
topic water policy
water portfolio planning
water resources management
systems assessment
adaptive capacity
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/6/1663
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