Abstract

Abstract. There are practical links between water resources management, climate change adaptation and sustainable development leading to reduction of water scarcity risk and re-enforcing resilience as a new development paradigm. Water scarcity, due to the global change (population growth, land use change and climate change), is of serious concern since it can cause loss of human lives and serious damage to the economy of a region. Unfortunately, in many regions of the world, water scarcity is, and will be unavoidable in the near future. As the scarcity is increasing, at the same time it erodes resilience, therefore global change has a magnifying effect on water scarcity risk. In the past, standard water resources management planning considered arrangements for prevention, mitigation, preparedness and recovery, as well as response. However, over the last ten years substantial progress has been made in establishing the role of resilience in sustainable development. Dynamic resilience is considered as a novel measure that provides for better understanding of temporal and spatial dynamics of water scarcity. In this context, a water scarcity is seen as a disturbance in a complex physical-socio-economic system. Resilience is commonly used as a measure to assess the ability of a system to respond and recover from a failure. However, the time independent static resilience without consideration of variability in space does not provide sufficient insight into system's ability to respond and recover from the failure state and was mostly used as a damage avoidance measure. This paper provides an original systems framework for quantification of resilience. The framework is based on the definition of resilience as the ability of physical and socio-economic systems to absorb disturbance while still being able to continue functioning. The disturbance depends on spatial and temporal perspectives and direct interaction between impacts of disturbance (social, health, economic, and other) and adaptive capacity of the system to absorb disturbance. Utility of the dynamic resilience is demonstrated through a single-purpose reservoir operation subject to different failure (water scarcity) scenarios. The reservoir operation is simulated using the system dynamics (SD) feedback-based object-oriented simulation approach.

Highlights

  • Risk, resilience, and vulnerability are the fundamental characteristics that defines the state of a system and are widely used to assess the performance of the system

  • Simonovic and Peck (2013) first developed a framework to quantify the resilience as a dynamic measure through system dynamics (SD) simulation approach and demonstrated the concept for the coastal urban flooding caused due to climate change

  • The concept of space-time dynamic resilience is applied to reservoir operation for the water scarcity scenario

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Summary

Introduction

Resilience, and vulnerability are the fundamental characteristics that defines the state of a system and are widely used to assess the performance of the system. Various approaches were developed for estimating the resilience of the system based on the concepts of Bruneau et al (2003), most of the approaches are estimating the resilience as a time independent measure that do not provide much insight about the recovery capability of the system over time. Simonovic and Peck (2013) first developed a framework to quantify the resilience as a dynamic measure through system dynamics (SD) simulation approach and demonstrated the concept for the coastal urban flooding caused due to climate change. The main objective of this study is implementation of the framework developed by Simonovic and Peck (2013) for quantifying the resilience to a water scarcity (deficit) scenario with consideration of variability in time and space. Results of the reservoir simulation and its space time dynamic resilience are discussed

Space-time dynamic resilience
An illustrative case study
Discussion

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