Scenario-Based Hydrological Modeling for Designing Climate-Resilient Coastal Water Resource Management Measures: Lessons from Brahmani River, Odisha, Eastern India

Widespread urban expansion around the world, combined with rapid demographic and climatic changes, has resulted in serious pollution issues in many coastal water bodies. To help formulate coastal management strategies to mitigate the impacts of these extreme changes (e.g., local land-use or climate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pankaj Kumar, Rajarshi Dasgupta, Shalini Dhyani, Rakesh Kadaverugu, Brian Alan Johnson, Shizuka Hashimoto, Netrananda Sahu, Ram Avtar, Osamu Saito, Shamik Chakraborty, Binaya Kumar Mishra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/11/6339
id doaj-ac232ae9c2e54058882c09ea1fe16606
record_format Article
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pankaj Kumar
Rajarshi Dasgupta
Shalini Dhyani
Rakesh Kadaverugu
Brian Alan Johnson
Shizuka Hashimoto
Netrananda Sahu
Ram Avtar
Osamu Saito
Shamik Chakraborty
Binaya Kumar Mishra
spellingShingle Pankaj Kumar
Rajarshi Dasgupta
Shalini Dhyani
Rakesh Kadaverugu
Brian Alan Johnson
Shizuka Hashimoto
Netrananda Sahu
Ram Avtar
Osamu Saito
Shamik Chakraborty
Binaya Kumar Mishra
Scenario-Based Hydrological Modeling for Designing Climate-Resilient Coastal Water Resource Management Measures: Lessons from Brahmani River, Odisha, Eastern India
Sustainability
coast
Odisha
Brahmani River
climate resilience
water management
water quality
author_facet Pankaj Kumar
Rajarshi Dasgupta
Shalini Dhyani
Rakesh Kadaverugu
Brian Alan Johnson
Shizuka Hashimoto
Netrananda Sahu
Ram Avtar
Osamu Saito
Shamik Chakraborty
Binaya Kumar Mishra
author_sort Pankaj Kumar
title Scenario-Based Hydrological Modeling for Designing Climate-Resilient Coastal Water Resource Management Measures: Lessons from Brahmani River, Odisha, Eastern India
title_short Scenario-Based Hydrological Modeling for Designing Climate-Resilient Coastal Water Resource Management Measures: Lessons from Brahmani River, Odisha, Eastern India
title_full Scenario-Based Hydrological Modeling for Designing Climate-Resilient Coastal Water Resource Management Measures: Lessons from Brahmani River, Odisha, Eastern India
title_fullStr Scenario-Based Hydrological Modeling for Designing Climate-Resilient Coastal Water Resource Management Measures: Lessons from Brahmani River, Odisha, Eastern India
title_full_unstemmed Scenario-Based Hydrological Modeling for Designing Climate-Resilient Coastal Water Resource Management Measures: Lessons from Brahmani River, Odisha, Eastern India
title_sort scenario-based hydrological modeling for designing climate-resilient coastal water resource management measures: lessons from brahmani river, odisha, eastern india
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Widespread urban expansion around the world, combined with rapid demographic and climatic changes, has resulted in serious pollution issues in many coastal water bodies. To help formulate coastal management strategies to mitigate the impacts of these extreme changes (e.g., local land-use or climate change adaptation policies), research methodologies that incorporate participatory approaches alongside with computer simulation modeling tools have potential to be particularly effective. One such research methodology, called the “Participatory Coastal Land-Use Management” (PCLM) approach, consists of three major steps: (a) participatory approach to find key drivers responsible for the water quality deterioration, (b) scenario analysis using different computer simulation modeling tools for impact assessment, and (c) using these scientific evidences for developing adaptation and mitigation measures. In this study, we have applied PCLM approach in the Kendrapara district of India (focusing on the Brahmani River basin), a rapidly urbanizing area on the country’s east coast to evaluate current status and predict its future conditions. The participatory approach involved key informant interviews to determine key drivers of water quality degradation, which served as an input for scenario analysis and hydrological simulation in the next step. Future river water quality (BOD and Total coliform (Tot. coli) as important parameters) was simulated using the Water Evaluation and Planning (WEAP) tool, considering a different plausible future scenario (to 2050) incorporating diverse drivers and pressures (i.e., population growth, land-use change, and climate change). Water samples (collected in 2018) indicated that the Brahmani River in this district was already moderately-to-extremely polluted in comparison to the desirable water quality (Class B), and modeling results indicated that the river water quality is likely to further deteriorate by 2050 under all of the considered scenarios. Demographic changes emerged as the major driver affecting the future water quality deterioration (68% and 69% for BOD and Tot. coli respectively), whereas climate change had the lowest impact on river water quality (12% and 13% for BOD and Tot. coli respectively), although the impact was not negligible. Scientific evidence to understand the impacts of future changes can help in developing diverse plausible coastal zone management approaches for ensuring sustainable management of water resources in the region. The PCLM approach, by having active stakeholder involvement, can help in co-generation of the coastal management options followed by open access free software, and models can play a relevant cost-effective approach to enhance science-policy interface for conservation of natural resources.
topic coast
Odisha
Brahmani River
climate resilience
water management
water quality
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/11/6339
work_keys_str_mv AT pankajkumar scenariobasedhydrologicalmodelingfordesigningclimateresilientcoastalwaterresourcemanagementmeasureslessonsfrombrahmaniriverodishaeasternindia
AT rajarshidasgupta scenariobasedhydrologicalmodelingfordesigningclimateresilientcoastalwaterresourcemanagementmeasureslessonsfrombrahmaniriverodishaeasternindia
AT shalinidhyani scenariobasedhydrologicalmodelingfordesigningclimateresilientcoastalwaterresourcemanagementmeasureslessonsfrombrahmaniriverodishaeasternindia
AT rakeshkadaverugu scenariobasedhydrologicalmodelingfordesigningclimateresilientcoastalwaterresourcemanagementmeasureslessonsfrombrahmaniriverodishaeasternindia
AT brianalanjohnson scenariobasedhydrologicalmodelingfordesigningclimateresilientcoastalwaterresourcemanagementmeasureslessonsfrombrahmaniriverodishaeasternindia
AT shizukahashimoto scenariobasedhydrologicalmodelingfordesigningclimateresilientcoastalwaterresourcemanagementmeasureslessonsfrombrahmaniriverodishaeasternindia
AT netranandasahu scenariobasedhydrologicalmodelingfordesigningclimateresilientcoastalwaterresourcemanagementmeasureslessonsfrombrahmaniriverodishaeasternindia
AT ramavtar scenariobasedhydrologicalmodelingfordesigningclimateresilientcoastalwaterresourcemanagementmeasureslessonsfrombrahmaniriverodishaeasternindia
AT osamusaito scenariobasedhydrologicalmodelingfordesigningclimateresilientcoastalwaterresourcemanagementmeasureslessonsfrombrahmaniriverodishaeasternindia
AT shamikchakraborty scenariobasedhydrologicalmodelingfordesigningclimateresilientcoastalwaterresourcemanagementmeasureslessonsfrombrahmaniriverodishaeasternindia
AT binayakumarmishra scenariobasedhydrologicalmodelingfordesigningclimateresilientcoastalwaterresourcemanagementmeasureslessonsfrombrahmaniriverodishaeasternindia
_version_ 1721351924255555584
spelling doaj-ac232ae9c2e54058882c09ea1fe166062021-06-30T23:12:25ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-06-01136339633910.3390/su13116339Scenario-Based Hydrological Modeling for Designing Climate-Resilient Coastal Water Resource Management Measures: Lessons from Brahmani River, Odisha, Eastern IndiaPankaj Kumar0Rajarshi Dasgupta1Shalini Dhyani2Rakesh Kadaverugu3Brian Alan Johnson4Shizuka Hashimoto5Netrananda Sahu6Ram Avtar7Osamu Saito8Shamik Chakraborty9Binaya Kumar Mishra10Natural Resources and Ecosystem Services, Institute for Global Environmental Strategies, Hayama, Kanagawa 240-0115, JapanNatural Resources and Ecosystem Services, Institute for Global Environmental Strategies, Hayama, Kanagawa 240-0115, JapanCSIR-National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI), Nehru Marg, Nagpur 440020, IndiaCSIR-National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI), Nehru Marg, Nagpur 440020, IndiaNatural Resources and Ecosystem Services, Institute for Global Environmental Strategies, Hayama, Kanagawa 240-0115, JapanNatural Resources and Ecosystem Services, Institute for Global Environmental Strategies, Hayama, Kanagawa 240-0115, JapanDepartment of Geography, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi, New Delhi 110007, IndiaFaculty of Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-0810, JapanNatural Resources and Ecosystem Services, Institute for Global Environmental Strategies, Hayama, Kanagawa 240-0115, JapanFaculty of Sustainability Studies, Hosei University, Tokyo 102-8160, JapanSchool of Engineering, Pokhara University, Pokhara-30, Lekhnath 33700, NepalWidespread urban expansion around the world, combined with rapid demographic and climatic changes, has resulted in serious pollution issues in many coastal water bodies. To help formulate coastal management strategies to mitigate the impacts of these extreme changes (e.g., local land-use or climate change adaptation policies), research methodologies that incorporate participatory approaches alongside with computer simulation modeling tools have potential to be particularly effective. One such research methodology, called the “Participatory Coastal Land-Use Management” (PCLM) approach, consists of three major steps: (a) participatory approach to find key drivers responsible for the water quality deterioration, (b) scenario analysis using different computer simulation modeling tools for impact assessment, and (c) using these scientific evidences for developing adaptation and mitigation measures. In this study, we have applied PCLM approach in the Kendrapara district of India (focusing on the Brahmani River basin), a rapidly urbanizing area on the country’s east coast to evaluate current status and predict its future conditions. The participatory approach involved key informant interviews to determine key drivers of water quality degradation, which served as an input for scenario analysis and hydrological simulation in the next step. Future river water quality (BOD and Total coliform (Tot. coli) as important parameters) was simulated using the Water Evaluation and Planning (WEAP) tool, considering a different plausible future scenario (to 2050) incorporating diverse drivers and pressures (i.e., population growth, land-use change, and climate change). Water samples (collected in 2018) indicated that the Brahmani River in this district was already moderately-to-extremely polluted in comparison to the desirable water quality (Class B), and modeling results indicated that the river water quality is likely to further deteriorate by 2050 under all of the considered scenarios. Demographic changes emerged as the major driver affecting the future water quality deterioration (68% and 69% for BOD and Tot. coli respectively), whereas climate change had the lowest impact on river water quality (12% and 13% for BOD and Tot. coli respectively), although the impact was not negligible. Scientific evidence to understand the impacts of future changes can help in developing diverse plausible coastal zone management approaches for ensuring sustainable management of water resources in the region. The PCLM approach, by having active stakeholder involvement, can help in co-generation of the coastal management options followed by open access free software, and models can play a relevant cost-effective approach to enhance science-policy interface for conservation of natural resources.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/11/6339coastOdishaBrahmani Riverclimate resiliencewater managementwater quality