4.6 Article

Investigating the Effects of Climate and Land Use Changes on Rawal Dam Reservoir Operations and Hydrological Behavior

Journal

WATER
Volume 15, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w15122246

Keywords

land use classification; Rawal dam; climate change; land use; land cover change; statistical downscaling; GCMs

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To assess the effects of climate change and land use change on Rawal Dam, a hydrological modeling study was conducted at the watershed scale. The HEC-HMS model simulated the hydrological response to historical precipitation, and the calibrated model was used to evaluate the impacts of land use and climate changes on reservoir inflows. The study found that precipitation is projected to increase in the future, leading to higher inflows to Rawal Dam. The calibrated model proved to be useful for future hydrological impact assessments on the reservoir.
In order to assess the effects of climate change and land use change on Rawal Dam, a major supply of water for Rawalpindi and Islamabad, this study uses hydrological modeling at the watershed scale. The HEC-HMS model was used to simulate the hydrological response in the Rawal Dam catchment to historical precipitation. The calibrated model was then used to determine how changes in land use and climate had an impact on reservoir inflows. The model divided the Rawal Dam watershed into six sub-basins, each with unique features, and covered the entire reservoir's catchment area using data from three climatic stations (Murree, Islamabad Zero Point and Rawal Dam). For the time spans of 2003-2005 and 2006-2007, the model was calibrated and verified, respectively. An excellent fit between the observed and predicted flows was provided by the model. The GCM (MPI-ESM1-2-HR) produced estimates of temperature and precipitation under two Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSP2 and SSP5) after statistical downscaling with the CMhyd model. To evaluate potential effects of climate change and land use change on Rawal Dam, these projections, along with future circumstances for land use and land cover, were fed to the calibrated model. The analysis was carried out on a seasonal basis over the baseline period (1990-2015) and over future time horizon (2016-2100), which covers the present century. The findings point to a rise in precipitation for both SSPs, which is anticipated to result in an increase in inflows throughout the year. SSP2 projected a 15% increase in precipitation across the Rawal Dam catchment region until the end of the twenty-first century, while SSP5 forecasted a 17% increase. It was determined that higher flows are to be anticipated in the future. The calibrated model can also be utilized successfully for future hydrological impact assessments on the reservoir, it was discovered.

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