Drought early warning based on optimal risk forecasts in regulated river systems: Application to the Jucar River Basin (Spain)

Date

2016-11-14

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

0022-1694

Format

Free to read from

Citation

Haro-Monteagudo D, Solera A, Andreu J, Drought early warning based on optimal risk forecasts in regulated river systems: application to the Jucar River Basin (Spain), Journal of Hydrology, Vol. 544, January 2017, pp. 36-45

Abstract

Droughts are a major threat to water resources systems management. Timely anticipation results crucial to defining strategies and measures to minimise their effects. Water managers make use of monitoring systems in order to characterise and assess drought risk by means of indices and indicators. However, there are few systems currently in operation that are capable of providing early warning with regard to the occurrence of a drought episode. This paper proposes a novel methodology to support and complement drought monitoring and early warning in regulated water resources systems. It is based in the combined use of two models, a water resources optimization model and a stochastic streamflow generation model, to generate a series of results that allow evaluating the future state of the system. The results for the period 1998–2009 in the Jucar River Basin (Spain) show that accounting for scenario change risk can be beneficial for basin managers by providing them with information on the current and future drought situation at any given moment. Our results show that the combination of scenario change probabilities with the current drought monitoring system can represent a major advance towards improved drought management in the future, and add a significant value to the existing national State Index (SI) approach for early warning purposes.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Monitoring, Early warning system, Optimisation modelling, Water resources systems analysis, Aquatool

DOI

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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