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CE 385 D Water Resources Planning and Management

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In East and Southeast Asia, during the monsoon season, rivers swell to over 10 ... Crosssectional area of the channel between the levees on either side, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CE 385 D Water Resources Planning and Management


1
CE 385 D Water Resources Planning and Management
  • Flood Management - 1
  • Daene C. McKinney

2
Floods
  • Floods affect the lives of more than 65 million
    people per year
  • More than any other type of disaster, including
    war, drought and famine
  • In East and Southeast Asia, during the monsoon
    season, rivers swell to over 10 times the dry
    season flow
  • About 13 (of 45,000) of all large dams in the
    world in more than 75 countries have a flood
    management function

USGS - top www.ci.austin.tx.us - bottom
3
Hydrologic Cycle
Precipitation, P(t)
Runoff, streamflow, Q(t)
4
Flood Damage
  • Injuries and loss of life
  • Social disruption
  • Income loss
  • Emergency costs
  • Physical damage
  • Structures, utilities, autos, crops, etc.
  • Lost value of public agency services
  • Police fire protection, hospitals, etc.
  • Tax loss
  • Property and sales

www.ci.austin.tx.us
5
Streamflow Hydrograph
Basin Lag
Centroid of Precipitation
Peak
Time of Rise
Recession Limb
Discharge, Q
Rising Limb
Baseflow Recession
Inflection Point
Baseflow Recession
Baseflow
Time
Beginning of Direct Runoff
End of Direct Runoff
6
Storm Runoff
  • Rainfall Divided
  • Direct runoff (Pe)
  • Initial loss (before DRO, Ia)
  • Continuing loss (after DRO, Fa)

7
Shoal Creek Flood - 1981
Precipitation
Streamflow
www.ci.austin.tx.us
8
Stream Gauging
  • Q VA
  • Estimate
  • Cross-sectional area
  • Average velocity
  • Subdivide cross-section
  • Determine "average" flow for each subdivision
  • Sum for total flow

9
Stage - Discharge Curve
  • Stage (height) and discharge (flow rate)

10
Extreme Events Return Period
  • Extreme events
  • Random variable (Q) Realization (q) Threshold
    qT
  • Extreme event
  • if Q qT
  • Recurrence interval
  • t Time between occurrences of Q qT
  • Return Period
  • T Et Average recurrence interval

11
Guadalupe River near Victoria
Exceeded 16 times, 16 recurrence intervals in 69
years
Exceedance probability
Return Period
12
Flow Exceedance Distribution
  • Q is RV Annual Maximum Flow
  • qT is flow with return period of T years
  • Flow exceedance probability
  • Exceedance Distribution

13
Events Considered in Design
  • Return periods (T)
  • 1 100 years (Minor structures)
  • Highway culverts bridges, Farm structures,
    urban drainage, air fields, small dams (w/o LOL)
  • 100 1000 years (Intermediate structures)
  • Major levees, intermediate dams
  • 500 100,000 years (Major structures)
  • Large dams, intermediate small dams (w LOL)
  • Probable Maximum Precipitation (PMP)
  • Probable Maximum Flood (PMF)

14
Flood Damage
  • Event damage
  • Damage from flood events (e.g., 10-, 50-,
    100-year events)
  • Used for emergency planning
  • Expected annual damage
  • Average annual damage for events that could occur
    in any year
  • Used for project B/C analyses

15
US Federal Flood Programs
  • Two agencies
  • US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE)
  • Focused on reducing flood damage through
    implementation of various protection works
  • Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
  • Focused on flood insurance as a means for partial
    recovery of losses for property owners
  • Floodplains flooded by the 100-year flood are
    subject to
  • land-use management provisions (no development in
    the floodway, properties must be elevated, etc.)
    and
  • flood insurance is mandatory for properties
    located within this zone if communities are to
    remain eligible for certain disaster relief
    programs.

16
Flood Damage Reduction(a US Corps of Engineers
Perspective)
  • Identify a plan that will reduce flood-damage and
    contribute to national economic development (NED)
    and is consistent with environmental protection
  • Benefits
  • Locational (BL) Increase in income from
    additional floodplain development
  • Intensification (BI) Increase in income from
    existing floodplain activities
  • Inundation reduction (BIR) Plan-related
    reduction in physical economic damage, income
    loss and emergency costs
  • Costs Total implementation costs OMR costs (C)

17
Inundation Reduction
  • Economic damages With and Without plan
  • Expected Annual Flood Damage
  • Risk of various magnitudes of flood damage each
    year
  • Weight damage by probability of event occurring

18
Flood-Damage Reduction Measures
19
Effect of Flood Management Measures
20
Planning Study
  • Which measures, Where to locate, What size, How
    to operate
  • Formulate ? Evaluate ? Compare various
    alternative plans
  • Reconnaissance phase
  • Find at least one plan that
  • Has positive Net Benefits
  • Satisfies environmental constraints
  • Is acceptable to local stakeholders
  • Estimate flood damages Without plan
  • Feasibility phase
  • Refine and search the set of feasible plans
  • Detailed studies of channel capacity, structural
    configurations, etc.
  • Evaluate economic objective, environmental
    compliance, etc.
  • Design phase

21
Computing Expected Annual Damage
stage-discharge
flow-probability
stage-damage
  • Compute
  • Damage exceedance distribution
  • Probability that Flood Damage (FD) is specified
    level (fdT)
  • Expected Annual Flood Damage

damage-probability
Expected Annual Damage
22
Computation of Expected Annual Damage
  • Construct basic relationships for without-plan
    situation
  • Flow exceedance distribution
  • Stage-discharge curve
  • Stage-damage curve
  • Damage exceedance distribution
  • Compute the area beneath the damage-exceedance
    distribution (expected annual flood damage) for
    each location and sum to obtain the total
    expected annual flood damage
  • Repeat step (1) for each alternative flood plain
    management plan under investigation
  • Repeat step (2)
  • Subtract results of step (4) (with plan) for each
    plan from without-plan results. The differences
    will be expected annual flood damage reduction
    for each plan

23
Expected Annual Flood Damage
Stage-discharge curve
Stage-damage curve
Flow exceedance distribution
Damage exceedance distribution
Calculating Expected Annual Flood Damage
24
Benefits of EFD Reduction
  • Expected Annual Flood Damage reduction
  • Difference between EFD with and without
    protection

Calculating Expected Flood Damage Reduction
Benefits
25
Floodplain Protected by a Levee
  • Probability of overtopping or geo-structural
    failure
  • Need stage-discharge relationships in the channel
    and on the floodplain
  • Flood stage in the floodplain protected by a
    levee is a function of
  • Flow in the stream or river channel,
  • Crosssectional area of the channel between the
    levees on either side,
  • Channel slope and roughness,
  • Levee height.
  • If floodwaters enter the floodplain
  • Water level in the floodplain depends on the
    topological characteristics of the floodplain

26
Levees
  • Probability of levee failure function of
  • Levee height
  • Distribution of flows
  • Probability of geostructural failure
  • Probability of levee failure
  • 15 probable non-failure point, PNP
  • 85 probable failure point, PFP

27
Example
Inundated 130 businesses and 732 residences,
second-story flooding, eight lives lost.
  • Urban basin.
  • Floods have caused significant damage
  • Flow is measured at a USGS gauge nearby
  • communities in the basin have been flooded
    periodically
  • Increased development in the upper portion of the
    basin promises to worsen the flood problem, as
    urbanization increases the volume and peak
    discharge

28
Example
  • Flood problem analyzed to identify opportunities
    for damage reduction
  • Set of damage reduction alternatives formulated
  • Evaluate each alternative in terms of economic
    performance
  • Display the results so that alternatives can be
    compared
  • Identify and recommend a superior plan from
    amongst the alternatives
  • The standard for damage-reduction benefit
    computation is the without-project condition.
    Expected annual damage should be computed
  • For the computation, discharge-frequency,
    stage-discharge, and stage-damage relationships
    were developed following standard procedures

29
Discharge - Probability Function
  • The existing, without-project discharge-frequency
    relationship was developed from the sample of
    historical annual maximum discharge observed at
    the USGS gauge

30
Stage - Discharge Function
  • The present, without project stage-damage
    relationship at the USGS gauge index point was
    developed from water-surface profiles computed
    with a computer program

31
Stage - Damage Function
  • Developed with the following procedure
  • Categorize structures in the basin
  • Define an average-case stage-damage relationships
    for categories
  • Add emergency costs

32
Flood Damage Exceedance Frequency
33
EAD Integration Procedure
Damage ()
  • Area between each pair of points is found by
    Integration.

Area added as last step in integration
Area under curve is expected annual damage
First exceedance value should be at zero damage
Last exceedance frequency
Exceedance Probability
34
Expected Annual Flood Damage
Trapezoid Rule
35
Uncertainty
  • In flood damage-reduction planning, uncertainties
    include
  • Future hydrologic events streamflow and rainfall
  • choice of distribution and values of parameters
  • Simplified models of complex hydraulic phenomena
  • geometric data, misalignment of structure,
    material variability, and slope and roughness
    factors
  • Relationship between depth and inundation damage
  • structure values and locations, how the public
    will respond to a flood
  • Structural and geotechnical performance when
    subjected to floods

36
Introducing Uncertainty
  • Assign probability density functions to
    evaluation functions
  • At any location an orthogonal slice would yield
    the PDF of uncertainty
  • EAD and benefits determined in the same way as
    before, however, a Monte Carlo sampling is used
    to sample from the functions to produce
    independent probability damage functions that
    are integrated to compute EAD
  • Monte Carlo sampling is repeated (replicates)
    until stable expected values are computed.

Darryl W. Davis, Risk Analysis in Flood Damage
Reduction Studies The Corps Experience, World
Water Congress 2003 118, 306 (2003)
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