Journal of Hydroinformatics (Sep 2023)

Data-driven modeling of municipal water system responses to hydroclimate extremes

  • Ryan Johnson,
  • Steven John Burian,
  • Carlos Anthony Oroza,
  • James Halgren,
  • Trevor Irons,
  • Danyal Aziz,
  • Daniyal Hassan,
  • Jiada Li,
  • Carly Hansen,
  • Tracie Kirkham,
  • Jesse Stewart,
  • Laura Briefer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2166/hydro.2023.170
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 5
pp. 1584 – 1609

Abstract

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Sustainable western US municipal water system (MWS) management depends on quantifying the impacts of supply and demand dynamics on system infrastructure reliability and vulnerability. Systems modeling can replicate the interactions but extensive parameterization, high complexity, and long development cycles present barriers to widespread adoption. To address these challenges, we develop the Machine Learning Water Systems Model (ML-WSM) – a novel application of data-driven modeling for MWS management. We apply the ML-WSM framework to the Salt Lake City, Utah water system, where we benchmark prediction performance on the seasonal response of reservoir levels, groundwater withdrawal, and imported water requests to climate anomalies at a daily resolution against an existing systems model. The ML-WSM accurately predicts the seasonal dynamics of all components; especially during supply-limiting conditions (KGE > 0.88, PBias < ±3%). Extreme wet conditions challenged model skill but the ML-WSM communicated the appropriate seasonal trends and relationships to component thresholds (e.g., reservoir dead pool). The model correctly classified nearly all instances of vulnerability (83%) and peak severity (100%), encouraging its use as a guidance tool that complements systems models for evaluating the influences of climate on MWS performance. HIGHLIGHTS Machine learning models capture water system response to climate-driven supply and municipal demand.; Machine learning can bypass the high parameterization and development challenges associated with systems models.; Predictions of water system component status from the XGBoost algorithm can produce representative estimates of reliability, vulnerability, and severity to support management decision-making.;

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