Collaboration /cadswes/ en CADWES R&D featured in Washington Post /cadswes/2024/02/15/cadwes-rd-featured-washington-post CADWES R&D featured in Washington Post Anonymous (not verified) Thu, 02/15/2024 - 09:41 Categories: News Tags: Collaboration RiverWare

The CADSWES contribution to the Colorado River modeling for collaborative decision making was featured in the Washington Post on February 11, 2024. The article decribes the history of the CU collaboration with the Bureau of Reclamation in developing the RiverWare modeling tools over the past decades. CADSWES models and software, integrated with recent innovations in decision making under deep uncertainty, are now deployed by Reclamation in a web App that is being used by stakeholders for exploring possible future operations of the river basin.

 

 

 

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Thu, 15 Feb 2024 16:41:32 +0000 Anonymous 852 at /cadswes
Edie Zagona Co-authors Study Identifying Risks and Benefits of GERD /cadswes/2020/10/21/edie-zagona-co-authors-study-identifying-risks-and-benefits-gerd Edie Zagona Co-authors Study Identifying Risks and Benefits of GERD Anonymous (not verified) Wed, 10/21/2020 - 14:51 Categories: News Tags: Collaboration Hydropower RiverWare

New study identifies risks and benefits of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam to Nile Countries and highlights necessity of coordinated drought planning

Near-term impacts of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) on downstream water availability for Egypt and Sudan are unlikely to cause shortages, but drought preparedness will require careful coordination, suggests research published October 16 by researchers from the University of Oxford, The University of Manchester, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Â鶹ӰԺ, and Duke University. Edith Zagona, director of CADSWES, was a co-author of the study, .

Construction of the dam, purposed for hydropower, is almost complete, and filling began this year, straining relations between countries along the Nile River. Negotiations on how to fill and operate the dam ended in deadlock again in September, partially over the perceived implications for water shortages in Sudan and Egypt. The proceedings have been made more difficult by a lack of reservoir simulation models that are considered sufficiently credible by all negotiators and decision makers involved.

The study used CADSWES RiverWare hydrologic policy modeling software to simulate conditions during the filling of the GERD reservoir, the “new normal” period afterward and under a historical severe multiyear drought after the filling. It shows that during the initial filling of the GERD, the High Aswan Dam’s (HAD) reservoir will fall, but the risk of additional water shortage in Egypt is relatively low. Once in operation, the GERD will benefit Ethiopia and Sudan without significantly affecting water users in Egypt as long as water flow in the Nile remains similar to its historical average. An “inevitable” severe drought would require an agreement in advance on how to coordinate operations to minimize harmful impacts.

 â€śDetailed modeling and analysis of operations is needed for successful negotiation of an agreement,” said Zagona. “In this paper the results of the complex simulations are presented in a way that nontechnical decision makers and others can understand.”

The paper concludes that developing robust contingency plans is not an insurmountable task and that in most years the GERD and HAD will require only data exchange and modest coordination.

“Understanding and managing new risks on the Nile with the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam,” was published in Nature Communications, Oct. 16, 2020. The study identifies risks and benefits of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) to Nile countries and highlights the necessity of coordinated drought planning.

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Wed, 21 Oct 2020 20:51:21 +0000 Anonymous 637 at /cadswes