EGU22-10394
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-10394
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Using public cloud computing infrastructure for rapid simulations of large-scale global reservoirs

Pieter Hazenberg1, Albrecht Weerts2, Bart van Osnabrugge3, Ivo Miltenburg2, and Willem van Verseveld2
Pieter Hazenberg et al.
  • 1Florida International University, Applied Research Center, USA
  • 2Deltares, Inland Water Systems -Delft, Netherlands (albrecht.weerts@deltares.nl)
  • 3University of Saskatchewan, Centre for Hydrology, Coldwater Laboratory, Canada

Water reservoirs play an important role in relation to water security, flood risk, agriculture production, hydropower, hydropower potential, and environmental flows. However, long-term daily information on reservoir volume, inflow and outflow dynamics are not publicly available. To enable deriving long-term reservoir dynamics for many reservoirs across the globe using a distributed hydrological model, large amounts of computer power are needed. Therefore, these types of simulations are generally performed on super computers. Nowadays, public cloud computing infrastructure offers interesting alternative and allows one to quickly access hundreds to thousands of computer nodes.

The current work presents an example of making use of the public cloud offers by simulating the dynamics of 3236 headwater reservoirs on a Kubernetes Cluster on Microsoft Azure. Within the cloud, distributed model forcing and hydrological parameters at a 1-km grid resolution were derived using HydroMT, which subsequently were used by wflow_sbm to perform long-term hydrological simulation over the period 1970-2020. To enable operation in the cloud, usage is made of the Argo workflow engine, that is effective able to schedule the sequential execution of the HydroMT and wflow_sbm containers. Using this setup, all model simulation results were obtained in less than a week. We will present the executed modeling setup within the public cloud as well as present some of the results derived in this manner by comparing observations with in situ and satellite observations.

How to cite: Hazenberg, P., Weerts, A., van Osnabrugge, B., Miltenburg, I., and van Verseveld, W.: Using public cloud computing infrastructure for rapid simulations of large-scale global reservoirs, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-10394, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-10394, 2022.