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River Basin Simulation with WEAP Water Evaluation and Planning System

River Basin Simulation with WEAP Water Evaluation and Planning System. David Rosenberg CEE 5460 – Water Resources Engineering. Learning Objectives. Describe reasons to model priority-based water allocations

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River Basin Simulation with WEAP Water Evaluation and Planning System

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  1. River Basin Simulationwith WEAPWater Evaluation and Planning System David Rosenberg CEE 5460 – Water Resources Engineering

  2. Learning Objectives • Describe reasons to model priority-based water allocations • Draw a system schematic (that includes water sources, demand sites, and return flows) • Calculate allocations given available water and delivery priorities • Add reservoir storage and release priorities • Use the WEAP system to set up the schematic, enter data, obtain results, and define + analyze scenarios http://www.weap21.org/ CEE 5460

  3. Motivation • To determine water availability, need to track inflows, reservoir storage, groundwater, return flows, and soil moisture • Then determine demands, deliveries, and shortages • Also need to consider allocation priorities • Appropriation doctrine (first in time, first in right) • By purpose (e.g.: urban demands before environmental) • By location (e.g.: upstream, then downstream, or reverse) • WEAP History • First developed in 1992 • WEAP21 version in 2005 • Already 119 published applications (33 in 2010) CEE 5460

  4. Draw a System Schematic • Identify the major system components • Water sources (surface and groundwater) • Demand sites (agricultural, urban, etc..) • Source connections to demand sites • Outflows from demand sites after use • Example 1: A river can supply water to a city and an agricultural district. The outfalls from agricultural drain pipes and the city’s wastewater treatment plant are located downstream of both diversion intakes. CEE 5460

  5. Drawing a System Schematic (cont.) • Example 2: A river can supply water to a city and an agricultural district. The city is located upstream of the agricultural district. 40% of the city’s withdrawals are collected, treated, returned to the river, and available for downstream use by the agricultural district. CEE 5460

  6. Calculate Allocations • Draw the schematic (previous slides) • Determine delivery targets for demand sites (demands) • Assign priorities to demand sites (delivery preferences) • Determine water availability • Sources • Return flows • Allocate remaining available water to meet delivery target of highest priority demand site • Repeat Steps 4 and 5 for next highest priority site. CEE 5460

  7. Calculate Allocations (cont.) • Example 3: A river can supply water to a city and an agricultural district. The outfalls from agricultural drain pipes and the city’s wastewater treatment plant are located downstream of both diversion intakes. • 70 ac-ft is available in the river this year. The table shows demand site priorities and delivery targets. • What water volume is allocated to each demand site? CEE 5460

  8. Calculate Allocations (cont.) • Example 4: A river can supply water to a city and an agricultural district. The city is located upstream of the agricultural district. 40% of the city’s withdrawals are collected, treated, returned to the river, and available for downstream use by the agricultural district. • 70 ac-ft is available in the river this year. The table shows demand site priorities and delivery targets. • What water volume is allocated to each demand site? CEE 5460

  9. Calculate Allocations (cont.) • Always use mass balance to determine water available to a user (or at model node) • Allocation calculations get more complicated as add demand sites and return flows • Computer modeling can really help! CEE 5460

  10. Adding Reservoirs • Reservoirs are just another supply source • Reservoir source availability determined by • Storage at end of previous time step • Reservoir release rules • Reservoir inflows, evaporation losses, etc. • Recall storage partition CEE 5460

  11. Adding Reservoirs (cont.) • In WEAP • First use in-stream flows to meet Demand Site targets • If in-stream flows inadequate, withdraw from reservoirs • Withdrawal a function of reservoir storage • Can also assign priorities to refill reservoirs Withdraw to meet full delivery target Withdraw reduced amount (buffer coefficient) CEE 5460

  12. WEAP Allocation Math • In each time step, WEAP solves a small linear program Maximize Demand Satisfaction • Meet supply priorities • Obey demand site preferences • Mass balance • Other constraints • Embed the LP in a time-series simulation (psuedo code) Such that: CEE 5460

  13. Using WEAP • Major Modules • Schematic • Data • Results • Scenario Explorer • Introduce modules today • Apply & practice through on-your-own lab exercise and PBL-3 CEE 5460

  14. WEAP Schematic • Drag and drop system node components • Demand sites • Reservoirs, etc. • Drag, click, and drop system link components • Rivers • Transmission links • Return flows • Add GIS layers to help place components • Must include all infrastructure you plan to test in Scenario Explorer CEE 5460

  15. Weaping River Example Schematic CEE 5460

  16. Schematic for the Lower Bear River QX61-Malad River QX5-Lower Bear Above Cutler QX6-Cache GW Cutler Cache Valley Bear River Canal Company New Cache QX15-South Cache QX54-Little Bear New Box Elder County Wetland Bird Refuge QX27-Box Elder GW QX22-Malad Reach Gain Reservoir, proposed Box Elder County Ag. Use Urban Use

  17. Hypothesized Cross Section for Above-Cutler Site 1:1 slope bank 30 ft Current river channel 150 ft 10 ft 1,700 ft

  18. Example 5. Complete the Lower Bear River Schematic • Open the partially complete WEAP Area for the Lower Bear River • Add the required demand sites, reservoirs, transmission links and return flows to the schematic. • What reservoir(s) did you add? • What demand sites did you add? CEE 5460

  19. WEAP Data Module • Enter data for each schematic component • Rivers: Headflows for each month of the simulation • Demand sites: activity levels, use rates, losses, consumption, demand priority (1=highest; 99=lowest) • Transmission links: Max flows, supply preference • Return flows: routing (percent returned) • Reservoirs: storage capacity, initial storage, volume-elevation curve, evaporation, pool definitions, buffer coefficients, priority • Enter data for a base case or a scenario • Enter data or read from input file CEE 5460

  20. Alternatively, right-click any schematic component to also get to the Data module CEE 5460

  21. Tree view, Buttons, and Tabs to navigate to desired data CEE 5460

  22. Graphical and tabular views of Demand Site Priority CEE 5460

  23. WEAP Results Module • Click the Results icon and recalculate (all scenarios) • Choose results from schematic or dropdown lists • Numerous options to view, tabulate, and export CEE 5460

  24. Water demands by Demand Site CEE 5460

  25. WEAP Scenario Explorer • Define and manage scenarios from the Data module • Enter input data here too CEE 5460

  26. WEAP Scenario Explorer (cont.) • Use Scenario Explorer icon to open scenario dashboard CEE 5460

  27. Conclusions • WEAP can simulate priority-based water allocations • Drag and drop interface to draw system schematic • Enter variety of data for river, demand site, reservoir, return flow, and other system components • View results in numerous formats • Use scenario tool to test and view results for changes in model inputs • Apply principles in Thursday’s lab exercise for the Weber Basin, Utah CEE 5460

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