Title: Water Resource Modeling in Egypt
1Water Resource Modeling in Egypt
Dr. David A. Wiberg Task Force on Population,
Human Capital, and Water in Egypt August 9-10,
2004 IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria
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5Water Scarcity Indicators
Indicator Scarcity Value Egypt
Renewable Water Resource/Population (m3/cap) lt 1000 830
Use/Availability gt 0.4 1.3
6Sample Modeling Approach
Climate Scenario
Hydrologic Model (Rainfall/Runoff)
Crop Model
Water Routing/ Management Model
Economic Model
Population Socio-Economics
7Climate Scenario Methods
- Historical analogues
- Spatial analogues
- Mathematical climate models such as global
circulation models (GCMs), and regional
circulation models (RCMs)
8Hydrologic Model Structure
9Routing/Management Model
10Crop Model Example AEZ
Suitability for rain-fed and irrigated cotton
(high inputs) Africa
11The International Linkage in the World Food
System Model
18 national models,2 country-group models,14
regional modelsCommodities wheat, rice, coarse
grains, protein feed, bovine ovine meat, dairy
products, other animal products, other food,
non-food agriculture, non-agriculture.Linkage
trade, world market prices and financial flows
12Climate Change Impacts on Reservoir Operation
- The Effect of Changing Mean and Variance of
Inflow Time Series
13Method
- Models Used
- GCMs (GFDL and GISS)
- Ratio and difference methods
- Precipitation-runoff model (WatBal)
- Stochastic ARMA model (SAMS)
- Mean and variability changed.
- Flow model (WOW)
- Historic values for everything except inflow used.
14Scenarios
- Historic
- mh, sh
- mh, 0.5 Wh 0.5 sh/ mh
- mh, 2 Wh 2 sh/ mh
- GFDL
- mgfdl, sh
- mgfdl, 0.5 Wh 0.5 sgfdl/ mgfdl
- mgfdl, 2 Wh 2 sgfdl/ mgfdl
- GISS
- mgfdl, sh
- mgfdl, 0.5 Wh 0.5 sgfdl/ mgfdl
- mgfdl, 2 Wh 2 sgfdl/ mgfdl
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16Stochastic Model Results
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19Reservoir Impact Results
- Reservoir parameters analyzed
- Number of water shortages (drought)
- Amount of spill (inefficient water use)
- Number of dam overtoppings
20Number of Drought Periods
21Number of Overtoppings
22Volume of Spill
23Analysis
- Impact of mean
- Storage curve shifts up or down, causing spill or
shortage - Possible Remedies
- Increase or decrease releases
- Problems
- May have to increase maximum release and maximum
spill
- Impact of variability
- Wider swings cause both spill and shortage in the
same series - Possible Remedies
- Increase storage capacity
- Problems
- Structural change necessary. Severe consequences.
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28Conclusions
- Changing climate variability is more difficult to
deal with than changing climate means and should
be included in any climate change study. - Mean changes can possibly be dealt with by simple
changes in operating policy - Climate variability changes require more
difficult structural changes and better
preparation.
29Sample Modeling Approach
Climate Scenario
Hydrologic Model (Rainfall/Runoff)
Crop Model
Water Routing/ Management Model
Economic Model
Population Socio-Economics
30Future Directions
- Improve modeling.
- Water Quality (water quality associated with
demand) - Location and quality of return flows
- Water supply/treatment costs
- Impact of water use efficiency on system
- Land degradation and subsidence
- Water use data necessary
- Include future water demand projections.
- Link routing/management model to economic model
to optimize operating policies for present and
future conditions.