Reassessing Existing Reservoir Supply Capacity and Management Resilience under Climate Change and Sediment Deposition

Freshwater resources are limited and seasonally and spatially unevenly distributed. Thus, in water resources management plans, storage reservoirs play a vital role in safeguarding drinking, irrigation, hydropower and livestock water supply. In the last decades, the dams’ negative effects, such as fr...

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Main Authors: Eleni S. Bekri, Polychronis Economou, Panayotis C. Yannopoulos, Alexander C. Demetracopoulos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/13/13/1819
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spelling doaj-4b5e2ed087e64e4cb8d4a48b959a48aa2021-07-15T15:48:30ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412021-06-01131819181910.3390/w13131819Reassessing Existing Reservoir Supply Capacity and Management Resilience under Climate Change and Sediment DepositionEleni S. Bekri0Polychronis Economou1Panayotis C. Yannopoulos2Alexander C. Demetracopoulos3Environmental Engineering Laboratory, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Patras, 265 04 Patras, GreeceEnvironmental Engineering Laboratory, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Patras, 265 04 Patras, GreeceEnvironmental Engineering Laboratory, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Patras, 265 04 Patras, GreeceHydraulic Engineering Laboratory, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Patras, 265 04 Patras, GreeceFreshwater resources are limited and seasonally and spatially unevenly distributed. Thus, in water resources management plans, storage reservoirs play a vital role in safeguarding drinking, irrigation, hydropower and livestock water supply. In the last decades, the dams’ negative effects, such as fragmentation of water flow and sediment transport, are considered in decision-making, for achieving an optimal balance between human needs and healthy riverine and coastal ecosystems. Currently, operation of existing reservoirs is challenged by increasing water demand, climate change effects and active storage reduction due to sediment deposition, jeopardizing their supply capacity. This paper proposes a methodological framework to reassess supply capacity and management resilience for an existing reservoir under these challenges. Future projections are derived by plausible climate scenarios and global climate models and by stochastic simulation of historic data. An alternative basic reservoir management scenario with a very low exceedance probability is derived. Excess water volumes are investigated under a probabilistic prism for enabling multiple-purpose water demands. Finally, this method is showcased to the Ladhon Reservoir (Greece). The probable total benefit from water allocated to the various water uses is estimated to assist decision makers in examining the tradeoffs between the probable additional benefit and risk of exceedance.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/13/13/1819reservoir managementreservoir operationclimate changesediment depositionreservoir storage capacity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eleni S. Bekri
Polychronis Economou
Panayotis C. Yannopoulos
Alexander C. Demetracopoulos
spellingShingle Eleni S. Bekri
Polychronis Economou
Panayotis C. Yannopoulos
Alexander C. Demetracopoulos
Reassessing Existing Reservoir Supply Capacity and Management Resilience under Climate Change and Sediment Deposition
Water
reservoir management
reservoir operation
climate change
sediment deposition
reservoir storage capacity
author_facet Eleni S. Bekri
Polychronis Economou
Panayotis C. Yannopoulos
Alexander C. Demetracopoulos
author_sort Eleni S. Bekri
title Reassessing Existing Reservoir Supply Capacity and Management Resilience under Climate Change and Sediment Deposition
title_short Reassessing Existing Reservoir Supply Capacity and Management Resilience under Climate Change and Sediment Deposition
title_full Reassessing Existing Reservoir Supply Capacity and Management Resilience under Climate Change and Sediment Deposition
title_fullStr Reassessing Existing Reservoir Supply Capacity and Management Resilience under Climate Change and Sediment Deposition
title_full_unstemmed Reassessing Existing Reservoir Supply Capacity and Management Resilience under Climate Change and Sediment Deposition
title_sort reassessing existing reservoir supply capacity and management resilience under climate change and sediment deposition
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Freshwater resources are limited and seasonally and spatially unevenly distributed. Thus, in water resources management plans, storage reservoirs play a vital role in safeguarding drinking, irrigation, hydropower and livestock water supply. In the last decades, the dams’ negative effects, such as fragmentation of water flow and sediment transport, are considered in decision-making, for achieving an optimal balance between human needs and healthy riverine and coastal ecosystems. Currently, operation of existing reservoirs is challenged by increasing water demand, climate change effects and active storage reduction due to sediment deposition, jeopardizing their supply capacity. This paper proposes a methodological framework to reassess supply capacity and management resilience for an existing reservoir under these challenges. Future projections are derived by plausible climate scenarios and global climate models and by stochastic simulation of historic data. An alternative basic reservoir management scenario with a very low exceedance probability is derived. Excess water volumes are investigated under a probabilistic prism for enabling multiple-purpose water demands. Finally, this method is showcased to the Ladhon Reservoir (Greece). The probable total benefit from water allocated to the various water uses is estimated to assist decision makers in examining the tradeoffs between the probable additional benefit and risk of exceedance.
topic reservoir management
reservoir operation
climate change
sediment deposition
reservoir storage capacity
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/13/13/1819
work_keys_str_mv AT elenisbekri reassessingexistingreservoirsupplycapacityandmanagementresilienceunderclimatechangeandsedimentdeposition
AT polychroniseconomou reassessingexistingreservoirsupplycapacityandmanagementresilienceunderclimatechangeandsedimentdeposition
AT panayotiscyannopoulos reassessingexistingreservoirsupplycapacityandmanagementresilienceunderclimatechangeandsedimentdeposition
AT alexandercdemetracopoulos reassessingexistingreservoirsupplycapacityandmanagementresilienceunderclimatechangeandsedimentdeposition
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