Title: Reassembling Hetch Hetchy
1Re-assembling Hetch Hetchy?
Water Supply Implications of Removing
OShaughnessy Dam
Sarah Null Geography Graduate Group UC Davis
2Californias Hydrology and Water Challenges (in a
nutshell)
- Water Supplies
- 200 maf/yr precipitation
- 70 maf runoff
- Most runoff in the North
- Much water stored as mountain snowmelt
- Seasonal and Annual Variations in Quantity
- Conflict for Limited Resources
- Water Demands
- Agricultural uses
- Urban uses
- Environmental uses
- Most Urban and Ag demands in the South
- Water Quality
- Conflicts over water quality, not all water is
alike
3California Water System
http//www.water.ca.gov/maps/allprojects.html
4Fallout
- Regional feuds over water allocation
- East vs. West North vs. South
- Agriculture vs. urban vs. environment
- Environmental problems
- California is dynamic problems and solutions are
continually changing
5Primary Study Questions
Background
The Hetch Hetchy System provides water for San
Francisco and neighboring cities. OShaughnessy
Dam is one component of this system, providing
approximately 25 of water storage for the Hetch
Hetchy System and none of its conveyance.
Removing OShaughnessy Dam has gained interest to
restore Hetch Hetchy Valley and open it to
recreation and tourism.
- If OShaughnessy Dam were removed, could existing
water facilities supply the Hetch Hetchy Systems
service area with water? - Would additional scarcity occur to other urban,
agricultural, or environmental water users
without OShaughnessy Dam? - What hydropower revenues would be lost from
removing OShaughnessy Dam? - Would water quality costs increase from removing
OShaughnessy Dam?
6History of the Hetch Hetchy System
- San Francisco earthquake (and ensuing fires)
acted as a catalyst for the search for a stable
water supply. - Huge controversy when Hetch Hetchy Reservoir
proposed (John Muir vs. San Francisco). - Raker Act passed 1913 by Taft (allowed a dam to
be built in a National Park). - OShaughnessy Dam completed in 1923.
Michael OShaughnessys plans for San Franciscos
water system
7Hetch Hetchy Valley
8Reasons to restore Hetch Hetchy Valley
Hetch Hetchy Valley, 1908
- Hetch Hetchy Valley was nearly identical to
Yosemite Valley prior to construction of
OShaughnessy Dam. - Water is scarce, but Yosemite Valley is also a
scarce resource. - Restoring Hetch Hetchy Valley could open an area
equal to Yosemite Valley to wildlife and
recreation. - Recreation and tourism benefits may exceed water
storage and hydropower benefits of the reservoir. - Ethical and aesthetic reasons - should a
reservoir for San Francisco be in Yosemite
National Park?
9Study Region
10Yosemite National Park Map
11OShaughnessy Dam
- A Hetch Hetchy System component.
- About 25 of SFPUCs storage in the Hetch Hetchy
System, 14 of storage on Tuolumne River. - Operated primarily for water supply and
hydropower production. - Removal could open Hetch Hetchy Valley for
restoration and recreation. - Water is scarce, space in Yosemite Valley is also
scarce.
- Water from OShaughnessy has filtration
avoidance, meaning only minimal water treatment
is necessary (chlorine or chloramine).
12Reservoir Capacities in the Hetch Hetchy System
13CALVIN economic-engineering model
- Minimizes economic costs within constraints
- Economic value functions for agricultural and
urban uses - Operating costs hydropower, water treatment,
pumping, etc. - Flow constraints for environmental uses
- Prescribes operation over a 72-year historic
hydrology - Surface and groundwater represented
- Major hydropower facilities
- Year 2020 projected demands and infrastructure
- Hypothetical inter-tie links New Don Pedro
Hetch Hetchy Aqueduct
14Californias Water System
155 Major surface reservoirs Extensive
groundwater Vast conveyance network Vast
irrigated acreage 36 million people
15Policy Activities Included
- Surface reservoir operations
- Groundwater reservoir operations
- Water allocation (markets exchanges)
- Urban conservation/use efficiencies
- Cropping changes and fallowing
- Irrigation technologies efficiencies
- New technologies
- Wastewater reuse
- Seawater desalination
- Integrates wide range of options
16- Network Flow Optimization
Minimize (1) Z ?? cij Xij, Xij is flow
from node i to node j Subject to (2) ? Xji
? aij Xij bj for all nodes j (3) Xij ?
uij for all arcs (4) Xij ? lij for all
arcs cij economic costs (ag. or urban) bj
external inflows to node j aij gains/losses on
flows in arc uij upper bound on arc lij lower
bound on arc
17Data Flow for the CALVIN Model
18Model Limitations
- Ignores political and institutional constraints
- No flood control or recreational benefits, but
current flood storage rules are respected - Simplified costs, water quality, hydrology
- Operates reservoirs aggressively with perfect
foresight
19Model runs
20Hetch Hetchy System Water Storagewith and
without OShaughnessy Dam
21Hetch Hetchy Aqueduct upstream of New Don Pedro
Seasonal Flow in Hetch Hetchy Aqueduct upstream
of New Don Pedro
Flow through New Don Pedro Inter-tie
22Hetch Hetchy System Schematic
23Water Scarcity
- No scarcity to urban areas.
- No scarcity to environmental demands.
- Small increase in scarcity to TID and MID (CVPM
11 12) without OShaughnessy Dam. - No scarcity to other agricultural demands.
24Average Deliveries, Scarcity, and Scarcity Cost
25Hetch Hetchy SystemHydropower Generation
Average annual difference 457 GWhr/yr Average
annual cost difference 11,107,050
26Water Treatment Changes
- Removing OShaughnessy Dam would prompt loss of
regulatory filtration avoidance status, raising
water treatment costs. - Construction costs, about 1-2 billion (50-100
million/year) - OM costs, about 6 million/year.
- Filtration avoidance makes OShaughnessy very
valuable. - Water quality would remain high.
27Major Conclusions
- Removing OShaughnessy Dam need not substantially
increase water scarcity. - Capture of considerable runoff could be possible
at the damsite for much of most years - No effects outside the Tuolumne basin, if New Don
Pedro Reservoir is connected directly with the
Hetch Hetchy Aqueduct. - Conveyance can sometimes substitute for water
storage. (Intertie between New Don Pedro
Reservoir and Hetch Hetchy Aqueduct) - Loss of filtration avoidance would be very
costly. - Removing OShaughnessy Dam reduces hydropower
generation and revenues. - Optimization modeling helps identify promising
re-operations for water resource systems
potentially undergoing restoration. - Politics and legal arrangements may be more
limiting to the Hetch Hetchy System than physical
constraints.
28More Conclusions(from a broader perspective)
- California will always have interesting evolving
water problems - Water supply engineering has changed with the
evolution of Californias water supply problems - The era of dam building is mostly over, future
problems are more likely to be solved with
creative management - Coordinated use of existing water supplies
- Conjunctive use (of surface water and
groundwater) - Water transfers
- Water conservation technologies
- Water supply solutions will continue to change as
problems continue to change - Some challenges are regional
29Contact Information
Sarah Null senull_at_ucdavis.edu Doctoral
Student UC, Davis Geography Graduate Group
Thesis available online http//cee.engr.ucdavis.e
du/faculty/lund/students/SarahNullThesis.pdf Par
tially funded by the UC Davis John Muir Institute
for the Environment