EGU21-5030, updated on 04 Mar 2021
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5030
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Regionalization of Reservoir regulation parameters using physiographic and climatological predictors

Pallav Kumar Shrestha, Stephan Thober, and Luis Samaniego
Pallav Kumar Shrestha et al.
  • Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research GmbH - UFZ, Computational Hydro Systems, Leipzig, Germany

Present regional and global scale hydrology has to account for man-made reservoirs that impart significant regulation signature into the downstream streamflow regime. Optimization of domains with large number of reservoirs would incur multitude of reservoir regulation parameters. Such parameter-set-per-reservoir approach not only results in excessive computational costs but also, by principle, lacks effective constraining of the parameter space. We propose an approach to derive single set of parameters for all the reservoirs and lakes in the modelling domain. The hypothesis is that reservoir regulation parameters can be regionalized using physiography and climatology at lakes and their catchments.

To test this hypothesis, we setup a modeling domain for the São Francisco basin of Northeast Brazil in the mesoscale hydrological model (mHM, www.ufz.de/mhm). The domain consists of climatology ranging from tropical (As) to semi-arid (BSh) and reservoirs with catchment area varying from less than 500 km2 to greater than 500,000 km2. We carried out correlation analysis between selected physiographical and climatological predictors and the reservoir parameters of the multiscale lake module, mLM, of the mHM model (https://presentations.copernicus.org/EGU2020/EGU2020-6047_presentation.pdf). For an instance, the reservoir rule curves in mLM are estimated based on inflow and position of water level. The predictors here are inflow and water level which are normalized using catchment area and the shape of the reservoir, respectively. Similarly, the timing and shape parameters of rule curves were plotted against the climatological characteristics of the upstream catchment. The preliminary results reveal significant trends between the mLM parameters and the normalized predictors. These mathematical relationships, better known as transfer functions, can now be used to generate a single global reservoir parameter set.

The demonstrated hypothesis helps to optimize regulated hydrology using a single parameter set, irrespective of size, location and inherent climatology of reservoirs involved. This is inline with the pre-existing paradigm of multiscale parameter regionalization (MPR) of mHM. The findings contribute to the contemporary effort of hydrological modeling society towards improved global scale hydrological modeling.

How to cite: Shrestha, P. K., Thober, S., and Samaniego, L.: Regionalization of Reservoir regulation parameters using physiographic and climatological predictors, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5030, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5030, 2021.

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