A Modeling Framework for Sustainable Water Resources Management
By Ximing Cai and Daene C. McKinney
ABSTRACT
A prototype modeling framework for quantitative
analysis of sustainable water resources management at the river
basin scale is developed and applied to the Syr Darya River basin
in Central Asia to analyze long-term water resource system sustainability.
The research problem is specified as long-term, sustainable water
resources management in river basins that are characterized by (semi)-arid
climate, a heavy dependence on irrigated agriculture, and possibly
severe environmental degradation in the form of water and soil salinity.
Sustainable water management is defined here as ensuring a long-term,
stable and flexible water supply capacity to meet crop water demands,
as well as growing municipal and industrial water demands, at the
same time as keeping a stable relationship between irrigation practices
and their associated environmental consequences. For this research,
an innovative systems approach has been developed to model and analyze
sustainability issues related to water resources management.
The core of this modeling framework consists of an intra-year,
short-term optimization model and an inter-year, long-term, dynamic
model that combines simulation and optimization. In the intra-year
model, essential hydrologic, agronomic, economic, and institutional
relationships are integrated into a coherent analytical framework
at the river basin scale to reflect the interdisciplinary nature
of water resources problems. The inter-year model includes long-term
changes and uncertainties in both water supply and demand, and incorporates
prescribed sustainability principles for river basin system performance
control. Relations between short-term irrigation practices and their
long-term economic and environmental consequences are modeled and
controlled in the inter-year modeling framework.
The intra-year, or short-term, model is applied to the Syr Darya
River basin to explore case-specific, in-depth hydrologic-agronomic-economic
institutional relationships. This application shows the power of
this type of integrated optimization model. Moreover, the application
of the long-term modeling framework to the case study area shows
the effectiveness of this tool for sustainability analysis in this
region.
Three approaches based on decomposition analysis and newly developed
genetic algorithms for solving highly complex water resources management
models that are large, nonconvex, and nonlinear are presented and
applied. The short-term model, which is a large and nonlinear model,
is solved by a "piece-bypiece" approach based on model
decomposition. A new genetic algorithm - linear programming approach
is used to solve the long-term model.
Throughout the study, both the feasibility and the effectiveness
of incorporating the philosophy of sustainability into traditional
water resources management modeling are addressed. It is argued
that system modeling techniques, if well supported by relevant empirical
studies, and if sufficient data are available, can promote the understanding
of sustainability in water resources research, a concept of utmost
importance that will strongly influence future research in water
resources management.
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