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      Water Supply Planning in the Face of Drought and Ecosystem Flows: Examining the Impact of the Bay-Delta Plan on Bay Area Water Supply

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          Abstract

          In California, recent Bay-Delta Plan legislation attempts to balance water supply and ecosystem protection by requiring 40% of the flow to remain in-stream in the Tuolumne River from February through June. Serious questions remain about what this means for the Bay Area water supply, especially during drought. Our work develops a new approach to analyze how in-stream flow policy coupled with climate change could impact regional water supply over the coming decades. Results show that the new in-stream flow demand would exceed urban water deliveries in a typical year. In wet years, water supply performance is minimally impacted, but in drought, the policy can lead to less water in storage, delayed reservoir recovery, and increased time at critically low storage. Storage impact exceeding 50 000 acre-feet (60 million m 3) is anticipated with at least 18% frequency, demonstrating that, climate uncertainty notwithstanding, this impact must be planned for and managed to ensure a reliable future water supply.

          Abstract

          Water-stressed communities are struggling to find sustainable solutions to meet their water needs without compromising ecosystem health. Our work advances planning efforts through a new analysis approach examining drought, policy, and climate change impacts to water supply performance.

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          Most cited references40

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          Climate change. Stationarity is dead: whither water management?

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            Projected Evolution of California's San Francisco Bay-Delta-River System in a Century of Climate Change

            Background Accumulating evidence shows that the planet is warming as a response to human emissions of greenhouse gases. Strategies of adaptation to climate change will require quantitative projections of how altered regional patterns of temperature, precipitation and sea level could cascade to provoke local impacts such as modified water supplies, increasing risks of coastal flooding, and growing challenges to sustainability of native species. Methodology/Principal Findings We linked a series of models to investigate responses of California's San Francisco Estuary-Watershed (SFEW) system to two contrasting scenarios of climate change. Model outputs for scenarios of fast and moderate warming are presented as 2010–2099 projections of nine indicators of changing climate, hydrology and habitat quality. Trends of these indicators measure rates of: increasing air and water temperatures, salinity and sea level; decreasing precipitation, runoff, snowmelt contribution to runoff, and suspended sediment concentrations; and increasing frequency of extreme environmental conditions such as water temperatures and sea level beyond the ranges of historical observations. Conclusions/Significance Most of these environmental indicators change substantially over the 21st century, and many would present challenges to natural and managed systems. Adaptations to these changes will require flexible planning to cope with growing risks to humans and the challenges of meeting demands for fresh water and sustaining native biota. Programs of ecosystem rehabilitation and biodiversity conservation in coastal landscapes will be most likely to meet their objectives if they are designed from considerations that include: (1) an integrated perspective that river-estuary systems are influenced by effects of climate change operating on both watersheds and oceans; (2) varying sensitivity among environmental indicators to the uncertainty of future climates; (3) inevitability of biological community changes as responses to cumulative effects of climate change and other drivers of habitat transformations; and (4) anticipation and adaptation to the growing probability of ecosystem regime shifts.
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              Lessons from California’s 2012–2016 Drought

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Environ Sci Technol
                Environ Sci Technol
                es
                esthag
                Environmental Science & Technology
                American Chemical Society
                0013-936X
                1520-5851
                23 February 2024
                05 March 2024
                : 58
                : 9
                : 4046-4055
                Affiliations
                []Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University , Stanford, California 94305, United States
                []Emmett Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources, Stanford University , Stanford, California 94305, United States
                [§ ]Department of Earth System Science, Stanford University , Stanford, California 94305, United States
                Author notes
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1018-9348
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5047-5528
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9177-1809
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0274-0240
                Article
                10.1021/acs.est.3c07398
                10919069
                38390867
                8f1a7c91-22b7-4d4f-9395-21dace5e46dd
                © 2024 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society

                Permits non-commercial access and re-use, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained; but does not permit creation of adaptations or other derivative works ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 07 September 2023
                : 05 February 2024
                : 02 February 2024
                Funding
                Funded by: National Science Foundation, doi 10.13039/100000001;
                Award ID: DGE 1656518
                Funded by: Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability, doi NA;
                Award ID: NA
                Funded by: Stanford University, doi 10.13039/100005492;
                Award ID: NA
                Categories
                Policy Analysis
                Custom metadata
                es3c07398
                es3c07398

                General environmental science
                water supply planning,drought,reliability,ecological flows,bay-delta plan,decision support

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