4.7 Article

How much water can be captured from flood flows to store in depleted aquifers for mitigating floods and droughts? A case study from Texas, US

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
卷 14, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ab148e

关键词

flood mitigation; high magnitude flows; environmental flows; drought mitigation; water right appropriations; Texas Gulf region; depleted aquifer

资金

  1. State of Texas Advanced Resource Recovery program
  2. Jackson Endowment

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Extreme flooding from Hurricane Harvey (similar to 100 km(3), similar to 80 million acre feet, maf of rainfall) in Houston, Texas, US co-located with depleted aquifers raises the question of whether we can capture floodwater to reduce flooding impacts and replenish aquifers for droughts. Here we quantified how much water could be captured from high magnitude flows (HMFs) in 10 major rivers discharging to the Gulf of Mexico for potential storage in depleted aquifers along the Texas Gulf Coast. Results show that HMFs (>= 95th percentile) from rivers discharging to the Gulf of Mexico total 37 km(3) (30 maf) in 2015-2017, similar in capacity to US Lake Mead (32 km(3), 26 maf). These flows are less than modeled unappropriated flows that consider appropriated water rights and limited analysis suggests moderate reduction from environmental flows. Similarity in high flow volumes and modeled groundwater depletion in the Gulf Coast Aquifer system (similar to 25 km(3), 20 maf) underscores the potential to partially mitigate flooding using aquifer storage. Interim storage would be required to resolve disconnects between high flood intensities and low aquifer injection rates. Engineering approaches will become increasingly important to manage climate extremes.

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