Abstract

Frequent saltwater intrusions in the Chao Phraya River have had an impact on water supply to the residents of Bangkok and nearby areas. Although relocation of the raw water station is a long-term solution, it requires a large amount of time and investment. At present, knowing in advance when an intrusion occurs will support the waterworks authority in their operations. Here, we propose a method to forecast the salinity at the raw water pumping station from 24 h up to 120 h in advance. Each of the predictor variables has a physical impact on salinity. We explore a number of model candidates based on two common fitting methods: multiple linear regression and the artificial neural network. During model development, we found that the model behaved differently when the water level was high than when the water level was low (water level is measured at a point 164 km upstream of the raw water pumping station); therefore, we propose a novel multilevel model approach that combines different sub-models, each of which is suitable for a particular water level. The models have been trained and selected through cross-validation, and tested on real data. According to the test results, the salinity can be forecasted with an RMSE of 0.054 g L\({^{-1}}\) at a forecast period of 24 h and up to 0.107 g L\({^{-1}}\) at a forecast period of 120 h.

Highlights

  • In the Chao Phraya River.In the past few years, seawater intrusion has occasionally caused events of high salinity in nearby areas of the Chao Phraya River

  • The station is managed by the Metropolitan Waterworks Authority (MWA), which is responsible for water supply production and distribution for Bangkok and nearby areas

  • Phraya river area; in particular, it affects the raw water in the MWA’s water distribution network in that area, since raw water is pumped from the Chao Phraya River

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Summary

Introduction

In the past few years, seawater intrusion has occasionally caused events of high salinity in nearby areas of the Chao Phraya River. The Chao Phraya is a river flowing from the north to the south through Bangkok and into the Gulf of Thailand; it is the main source of water in central Thailand. An intrusion is problematic because water supply production and irrigation rely on water from the Chao Phraya River. There is a pumping station for water supply at Samlae, Pathum Thani Province, which is approximately 96 km upstream of the mouth of the Chao Phraya River. The station is managed by the Metropolitan Waterworks Authority (MWA), which is responsible for water supply production and distribution for Bangkok and nearby areas. The surveillance threshold for salinity concentration is set at 0.25 g L–1 and the maximum salinity concentration is limited to

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