EGU21-10056
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10056
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Building the tools to speed up the policy design cycle: letting policy makers work with hydrologic models themselves through eWaterCycle

Nick van de Giesen1, Rolf Hut1, Niels Drost2, and the Netherlands eScience Centre*
Nick van de Giesen et al.
  • 1Delft University of Technology, Water Management, Water Resources, Delft, Netherlands (n.c.vandegiesen@tudelft.nl)
  • 2Netherlands eScience Centre, Amsterdam, Netherlands (n.drost@esciencecenter.nl)
  • *A full list of authors appears at the end of the abstract

Building the tools to speed up the policy design cycle: letting policy makers work with hydrologic models themselves through eWaterCycle

 

Hydrologists are important experts that policy makers rely on when making water related decisions. Through policy briefs, often including scenario simulations, policy makers are informed about the consequences their (intended) policies (or lack thereof) will have.

 

In drafting policy briefs, or choosing which scenario to run, scientists inevitably make political decisions, from obvious ones (how to weigh the importance of one land use type over another) to more hidden ones (using Kling-Gupta efficiency, which focuses more on low flow, to calibrate a model instead of Nash-sutcliffe efficiency, which focuses more on high flows). Ideally one wants to design the policymaker - scientist interaction such that most political decisions are made by the policymaker, without requiring her/him to become an expert hydrologist in the process. Any remaining (inevitable) decisions made by the hydrologist should be as transparent as possible.

 

The eWaterCyle hydrologic research platform facilitates this type of policy maker - hydrologists interaction. Within the platform experiments such as scenario runs are Jupyter notebooks that a governmental data-scientist can construct without having to be an expert in the hydrological models used: these are stored in (OPEN and FAIR) containers. Interactive web applications  can be easily built on top of these notebooks using widgets, to allow the ultimate political decision maker to explore a broader range of policy options, instead of having to choose from a view of pre-run scenarios. 

 

We will present a few examples of how the eWaterCycle hydrological research platform can be used to support water-relevant policy decision making.

Netherlands eScience Centre:

Ben van Werkhoven, Ronald van Haren, Yifat Dzigan, Jaro Camphuijsen, Fakhereh Alidoost, Inti Pelupessy, Berend Weel, Gijs van den Oord, Stefan Verhoeven, Bouwe Andela, Peter Kalverla, Stef Smeets

How to cite: van de Giesen, N., Hut, R., and Drost, N. and the Netherlands eScience Centre: Building the tools to speed up the policy design cycle: letting policy makers work with hydrologic models themselves through eWaterCycle, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10056, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10056, 2021.