1 / 19

Drought Management Issues - Portland Metropolitan Area

Drought Management Issues - Portland Metropolitan Area. Presented by Lorna Stickel Portland Water Bureau and Regional Water Providers Consortium Project Manager. Drought Issues in the Past.

Download Presentation

Drought Management Issues - Portland Metropolitan Area

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Drought Management Issues - Portland Metropolitan Area Presented by Lorna Stickel Portland Water Bureau and Regional Water Providers Consortium Project Manager

  2. Drought Issues in the Past • 1992 was the last year that Drought Plans were activated for municipal water providers in the Portland area. • Municipal Providers attempt to provide for drought years by planning for summer supplies to meet weather events. • Curtailment has not been a popular means to meet municpal needs in the NW.

  3. Regional Water Supply Plan 1996 • Planning for supplies in Portland area included some aspect of meeting drought needs within the Regional Water Supply Plan (RWSP) • Water Demand Forecasting - High forecast selected. • Integrated modeling allowed for looking at weather events of the past so those that drove demands higher were selected for analysis.

  4. Regional Water Supply Plan 1996 • Patterns of use in the NW result in highest needs during 3-4 summer months and during peak events for high temperature days for 3-5 days. RWSP focused on summer needs in worst years. • Public involvement activities showed low tolerance for planned shortages that last summer long, more for few day events.

  5. Regional Water Supply Plan 1996 • Drought events are included in the RWSP by using the 60 year weather history and picking the worst years and highest demand forecast scenarios. • Conservation Programs selected to focus on the summer peak season uses. • Some interties proposed to connect sources better.

  6. Implementation of RWSP • Regional Water Providers Consortium Formed to coordinate implementation. • Consortium further looked at transmission and storage and adopted a strategy in 2000. • Conservation programs folded into the Consortium in 2000-2001 FY. • RWSP update scheduled for 2001-2003.

  7. Water Supplies & Transmission • Portland area water supplies include multiple sources: • Bull Run/South Shore Wellfield • Clackamas River • Trask/Tualatin • Groundwater • Small surface sources

  8. Water Supplies & Transmission • Some of region’s sources are interconnected, but these connections are relatively small in size. • Only the Bull Run system has a large supplemental source in the CSSWF, allowing conjunctive use of two sources. • ASR is being evaluated in the region (Portland, TVWD, Beaverton).

  9. Drought Planning Process • O.R.S. 536.700 Emergency Water Shortage Powers: • Governor has authority to declare drought and does so on a County by County basis (only Klamath Co. is so declared this year so far). • Water Resources Commission sets requirement to submit drought plans

  10. Drought Planning Process -2 • Drought Plans have to be submitted in 30 days after a requirement is made by WRC. All jurisdictions over 10,000 population were required to do this in 1992. • Water Resources Dept. may respond to drought declarations by actions on emergency permits and changes to existing rights to respond quickly to emergency needs.

  11. Portland Area Drought Plans • All larger jurisdictions submitted plans in 1992, some of these are still active, while others were repealed. • In 1992 the City of Portland added a new section to the City Code on Water Conservation Measures. • Allows Bureau Administrator to adopt rules with a public process or for limited duration.

  12. Portland Area Drought Plans • Portland continued: • Enforcement outlined for violations, allows for one violation per day. Appeals allowed. • Wholesale contracts the mechanism for curtailment coordination • Commissioner in Charge may terminate rules.

  13. City of Portland Drought Plan • Portland Administrative Rules • Sets in place Level 1 restrictions • Prohibitions on outdoor watering during the day • Washing hardened surfaces, and vehicles • Filling water features or cleaning them • water wasting by leaving hoses running • Exceptions listed • Enforcement detailed further

  14. City of Portland Drought Plan • Level 2 Restrictions • Outside washing of vehicles prohibited, no exceptions • Window washing with hose (limited exceptions) • Failure to fix leaks • Filling vessels to irrigate outdoors from hydrants or other outdoor fixtures • New set of exceptions defined for circumstances not defined earlier

  15. Portland Area Drought Plans • Portland submitted a Drought Plan to WRD that included those of larger wholesale customers, the content is similar. • Other water systems in Portland adopted plans in 1992 also. • Since 1992 the Portland water system has adopted an annual summer supply plan.

  16. Potential Supplies for 2001 • Source diversity means not all systems have the same limitations • Weather driven spring for 2001 will be a key factor in the extent of any summer shortages • Portland not expecting shortages • JWC west side system is planning for shortage • Clackamas River systems not determined • GW systems not expecting shortage unless already quantity limited.

  17. Challenges for Drought Events • How to work drought into longer term plans needs to be addressed, and can be done better than it has in the past. Global warming scenarios should be considered. • Planned curtailments are not popular without building substantial public support.

  18. Challenges for Drought Events • Differences in supply situations presents problems for providers - single media market in the Portland region. • Drought plans need to reflect different customer class mix for each entity. • Conjunctive use of sources presents opportunities to mitigate for different effects of drought throughout the region.

  19. Challenges for Drought Events • Primary targets for curtailment are outdoor water use, larger customers, and source switching. Indoor curtailment is more difficult to sustain over longer periods. • Conservation program savings over time make the margin for curtailment less. • Transmission connections are expensive if they are only for short term usage.

More Related