Drought Management and Planning for Water Resources
Coordonnateurs : Alvarez Joaquin Andreu, Rossi Giuseppe, Vagliasindi Federico, Vela Mayorga Alicia
Droughts and their management are a serious challenge to water resource professionals. While droughts predominate in arid regions, their frequency and severity in more temperate regions with more abundant rainfall have been on the rise. Drought Management and Planning for Water Resources provides an essential collection of planning and management tools for minimizing the negative impacts of droughts. Comprehensive and up-to-date, it covers water conservation and reuse, conjunctive use and use of marginal resources, desalination, deep groundwater extraction, optimization modeling, and decision support systems.
With contributions from a prestigious international panel, the book presents best management practices that maximize efficiency, reliability, and economy while minimizing the potential for adverse effects to the environment and human health. Providing appropriate methodologies, the chapters discuss how conjunctive water use can increase water availability in the developing world and what types of conjunctive use schemes are the most promising. The book examines the feasibility of a drought watch alert system and the legal and administrative framework required. It also explores the application of the Optimization Models and the Decision Support Systems to the study of different water management alternatives under drought conditions. Drought Management and Planning for Water Resources delineates how to reduce drought effects through pro-active vision, good management, and conjunctive use of water sources.
Date de parution : 09-2019
21x28 cm
Date de parution : 11-2005
Ouvrage de 252 p.
21x28 cm
Mots-clés :
Marina Baja; Drought Mitigation Measures; Artificial Recharge; Water Resources System; Ground Water Recharge; Wastewater Reuse; Drought Planning; Drought Indicators; Water Reuse; Drought Management; Operative Drought; River Basin District; Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District; Natural Drought; Marginal Water; Ground Water Pumping; Demand Nodes; Lake Cayuga; Catania Plain; WBIS; Water Quality Index; Basin Agency; Minimum In-stream Flow; Drought Mitigation; Reuse Alternatives