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    Optimized Flood Control in the Columbia River Basin for a Global Warming Scenario

    Source: Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management:;2009:;Volume ( 135 ):;issue: 006
    Author:
    Se-Yeun Lee
    ,
    Alan F. Hamlet
    ,
    Carolyn J. Fitzgerald
    ,
    Stephen J. Burges
    DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9496(2009)135:6(440)
    Publisher: American Society of Civil Engineers
    Abstract: Anticipated future temperature changes in the mountainous U.S. Pacific Northwest will cause reduced spring snow pack, earlier melt, earlier spring peak flow and lower summer flow in transient rain-snow and snowmelt dominant river basins. In the context of managed flood control, these systematic changes are likely to disrupt the balance between flood control and reservoir refill in existing reservoir systems. To adapt to these hydrologic changes, refill timing and evacuation requirements for flood control need to be modified. This work poses a significant systems engineering problem, especially for large, multiobjective water systems. An existing optimization/simulation procedure is refined for rebalancing flood control and refill objectives for the Columbia River Basin for anticipated global warming. To calibrate the optimization model for the 20th century flow, the objective function is tuned to reproduce the current reliability of reservoir refill, while providing comparable levels of flood control to those produced by current flood control practices. After the optimization model is calibrated using the 20th century flow the same objective function is used to develop flood control curves for a global warming scenario which assumes an approximately
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      Optimized Flood Control in the Columbia River Basin for a Global Warming Scenario

    URI
    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/40246
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    • Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management

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    contributor authorSe-Yeun Lee
    contributor authorAlan F. Hamlet
    contributor authorCarolyn J. Fitzgerald
    contributor authorStephen J. Burges
    date accessioned2017-05-08T21:08:29Z
    date available2017-05-08T21:08:29Z
    date copyrightNovember 2009
    date issued2009
    identifier other%28asce%290733-9496%282009%29135%3A6%28440%29.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/40246
    description abstractAnticipated future temperature changes in the mountainous U.S. Pacific Northwest will cause reduced spring snow pack, earlier melt, earlier spring peak flow and lower summer flow in transient rain-snow and snowmelt dominant river basins. In the context of managed flood control, these systematic changes are likely to disrupt the balance between flood control and reservoir refill in existing reservoir systems. To adapt to these hydrologic changes, refill timing and evacuation requirements for flood control need to be modified. This work poses a significant systems engineering problem, especially for large, multiobjective water systems. An existing optimization/simulation procedure is refined for rebalancing flood control and refill objectives for the Columbia River Basin for anticipated global warming. To calibrate the optimization model for the 20th century flow, the objective function is tuned to reproduce the current reliability of reservoir refill, while providing comparable levels of flood control to those produced by current flood control practices. After the optimization model is calibrated using the 20th century flow the same objective function is used to develop flood control curves for a global warming scenario which assumes an approximately
    publisherAmerican Society of Civil Engineers
    titleOptimized Flood Control in the Columbia River Basin for a Global Warming Scenario
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume135
    journal issue6
    journal titleJournal of Water Resources Planning and Management
    identifier doi10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9496(2009)135:6(440)
    treeJournal of Water Resources Planning and Management:;2009:;Volume ( 135 ):;issue: 006
    contenttypeFulltext
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