A coupled modeling framework for sustainable watershed management in transboundary river basins
Authored by Hassaan Furqan Khan, Y C Ethan Yang, Hua Xie, Claudia Ringler
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.5194/hess-21-6275-2017
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/qzhao22/WLE_TOOL_INTERFACE/
Abstract
There is a growing recognition among water resource managers that
sustainable watershed management needs to not only account for the
diverse ways humans benefit from the environment, but also incorporate
the impact of human actions on the natural system. Coupled natural-human
system modeling through explicit modeling of both natural and human
behavior can help reveal the reciprocal interactions and co-evolution of
the natural and human systems. This study develops a spatially scalable,
generalized agent-based modeling (ABM) framework consisting of a
process-based semi-distributed hydrologic model (SWAT) and a
decentralized water system model to simulate the impacts of water
resource management decisions that affect the
food-water-energy-environment (FWEE) nexus at a watershed scale. Agents
within a river basin are geographically delineated based on both
political and watershed boundaries and represent key stakeholders of
ecosystem services. Agents decide about the priority across three
primary water uses: food production, hydropower generation and ecosystem
health within their geographical domains. Agents interact with the
environment (streamflow) through the SWAT model and interact with other
agents through a parameter representing willingness to cooperate. The
innovative two-way coupling between the water system model and SWAT
enables this framework to fully explore the feedback of human decisions
on the environmental dynamics and vice versa. To support non-technical
stakeholder interactions, a web-based user interface has been developed
that allows for role-play and participatory modeling. The generalized
ABM framework is also tested in two key transboundary river basins, the
Mekong River basin in Southeast Asia and the Niger River basin in West
Africa, where water uses for ecosystem health compete with growing human
demands on food and energy resources. We present modeling results for
crop production, energy generation and violation of eco-hydrological
indicators at both the agent and basin-wide levels to shed light on
holistic FWEE management policies in these two basins.
Tags
Agriculture
Climate
Hydrology
Land-use
Optimization
Impact
Natural systems
Resources
Mekong
Hydropower