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Robust Decision-Making in the Water Sector : A Strategy for Implementing Lima’s Long-Term Water Resources Master Plan
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- World Bank, Washington, DC, 2015.
-
Abstract
- How can water resource agencies make smart investments to ensure long-term water reliability when the future is fraught with deep climate and economic uncertainty? This study helped SEDAPAL, the water utility serving Lima, Peru, answer this question by drawing on state of the art methods for decision making under deep uncertainty. These methods provide techniques for evaluating the performance of a water system over a wide range of plausible futures and then developing strategies that are robust across these futures. Rather than weighting futures probabilistically to define an optimal strategy, these methodologies identify the vulnerabilities of a system and then evaluate the key trade-offs among different adaptive strategies. Through extensive iteration and collaboration with SEDAPAL, the study used these methods to define an investment strategy that is robust, ensuring water reliability across as wide a range of future conditions as possible while also being economically efficient. First,on completion, the study helped SEDAPAL realize that not all projects included in the Master Plan were necessary to achieve water reliability, and the utility could save 25 percent (more than $600 million) in investment costs. Second, the study helped focus future efforts on demand-side management, pricing, and soft infrastructure, a refocusing that is difficult to achieve in traditional utility companies. Third, the study helped SEDAPAL gain the support of regulatory and budget agencies through the careful analysis of alternatives. Fourth, the study allowed the utility to postpone lower priority investments, and to analyze future options based on climate and demand information that simply is not available now.
- Subjects :
- STREAMFLOW
RIVERS
WATER CONSUMPTION
WATER UTILITY
DEMAND MANAGEMENT POLICIES
FLOW
CANALS
RIVER BASINS
FLOOD RISK
WATER BANKING
WATER TRANSFER
PROGRAMS
WASTE STREAMS
DELTAS
WATER SOURCES
WATER
STAKEHOLDER INVOLVEMENT
WATER MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES
RAINFALL
POPULATION GROWTH
MUNICIPAL WATER
WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
CONSTRUCTION
WATER POLLUTION
WATER RESOURCE
FLOOD MANAGEMENT
STATISTICS
EVAPORATION
WATER DEMAND
WATER INFRASTRUCTURE
WATER TREATMENT
FLOOD RISK MANAGEMENT
WATER DISTRICT
LAKES
WATER FLOWS
WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
WATER USES
WATER MANAGEMENT
INDUSTRY
LEAD
HYDROLOGY
SANITATION
POLLUTION
BROAD RANGE
GLACIERS
WATERSHED
MUNICIPAL AUTHORITIES
WATER LEVELS
SUSTAINABLE WATER
WATER MANAGEMENT MODEL
DECISION MAKING
WATER SYSTEM
WATER SUPPLIES
SERVICE AREA
WATER MANAGEMENT AGENCIES
SCIENCES
COST SAVINGS
MUNICIPAL WATER SUPPLY
WATER SECTOR
INDUSTRIAL WATER DEMAND
TREATMENT PLANTS
WATER SHORTAGES
DEMAND FOR WATER
GROUNDWATER
CLIMATE CHANGE
RESEARCH
WATER STORAGE
CLIMATE WARMING
SUPPLY OF WATER
RIVER BASIN
WATER NEEDS
IRRIGATION
SOURCES OF WATER
FLOW CONDITIONS
RUNOFF
DROUGHT
STORAGE CAPACITY
SUSTAINABLE WATER SUPPLY
FLOOD CONTROL
INDUSTRIAL WATER
WATERSHEDS
WATER SYSTEMS
DESALINATION
URBAN RUNOFF
INVESTMENT COSTS
WASTEWATER
RECYCLED WATER
DOMESTIC USES
AVAILABILITY OF WATER
DEMAND MANAGEMENT
BASINS
UTILITIES
GROUNDWATER SOURCES
SYSTEMS
WATER MANAGEMENT DECISION
WATER SUPPLY PROJECTS
WATER TREATMENT PLANT
DAMS
WATER AGENCIES
GROUNDWATER BASINS
COMPETITION FOR WATER
WATER UTILITIES
WATER QUALITY
WATER SUPPLY
FRESHWATER
WATER USE
DECISION MAKERS
AGRICULTURAL RUNOFF
WATER RESOURCES
ECOSYSTEM
WATER MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
RESERVOIRS
HYDROLOGIC CONDITIONS
WATER RESOURCES PLANNING
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.od......2456..b47737c544a38f6c233c5fa32073023c