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contributor authorJames Tomlinson
contributor authorAndrew Slaughter
contributor authorEvgenii Matrosov
contributor authorJonny Wilson
contributor authorRichard Blackwell
contributor authorTracey Dunford
contributor authorMargaret Read
contributor authorJonathan Dennis
contributor authorJulien J. Harou
date accessioned2025-04-20T10:34:54Z
date available2025-04-20T10:34:54Z
date copyright10/24/2024 12:00:00 AM
date issued2025
identifier otherJWRMD5.WRENG-6506.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4304996
description abstractMany countries contain some regions with water surpluses and others with deficits, and with differences in the marginal cost of future water supply development. These factors imply to some extent an opportunity to attain or maintain water supply service levels at lower cost by sharing resources regionally through water transfers. There is then the question of which transfers to select, in conjunction with which existing and new supply options. In countries with strong disparities in regional water availability and population density, a least-cost design may imply some transfers which are less attractive from a political or environmental point of view. Political, social, and engineering preferences may push toward relying on local sources rather than imports, but how far should planners stray from least-cost infrastructure upgrade programs? One way to address this question is to identify how national-scale water supply and transfer infrastructure development would change as planners stray from the least-cost design toward systems more aligned with their preferences (e.g., fewer imports). We demonstrate such an approach on a national-scale problem: the water supply infrastructure of England and Wales for the year 2050 under various demand, drought resilience, and environmental sustainability scenarios. National-scale results show how insufficient transfers may strand surplus water, and that water sharing at regional and national scales reduces costs and helps balance supply and demand.
publisherAmerican Society of Civil Engineers
titleNational-Scale Optimized Design of Cost-Effective Water Supply and Transfer Systems
typeJournal Article
journal volume151
journal issue1
journal titleJournal of Water Resources Planning and Management
identifier doi10.1061/JWRMD5.WRENG-6506
journal fristpage04024060-1
journal lastpage04024060-15
page15
treeJournal of Water Resources Planning and Management:;2025:;Volume ( 151 ):;issue: 001
contenttypeFulltext


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