TY - JOUR
T1 - Anticipating water distribution service outages from increasing temperatures
AU - Bondank, Emily N.
AU - Chester, Mikhail V.
AU - Michne, Austin
AU - Ahmad, Nasir
AU - Johnson, Nathan G.
AU - Ruddell, Benjamin L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd.
PY - 2022/12/1
Y1 - 2022/12/1
N2 - With projected temperature increases and extreme events due to climate change for many regions of the world, characterizing the impacts of these emerging hazards on water distribution systems is necessary to identify and prioritize adaptation strategies for ensuring reliability. To aid decision-making, new insights are needed into how water distribution system reliability to climate-driven heat will change, and the proactive maintenance strategies available to combat failures. To this end, we present the model Perses, a framework that joins a water distribution network hydraulic solver with reliability models of physical assets or components to estimate temperature increase-driven failures and resulting service outages in the long term. A theoretical case study is developed using Phoenix, Arizona temperature profiles, a city with extreme temperatures and a rapidly expanding infrastructure. By end-of-century under hotter futures there are projected to be 1%-5% more pump failures, 2%-5% more PVC pipe failures, and 3%-7% more iron pipe failures (RCP 4.5-8.5) than a baseline historical temperature profile. Service outages, which constitute inadequate pressure for domestic and commercial use are projected to increase by 16%-26% above the baseline under maximum temperature conditions. The exceedance of baseline failures, when compounded across a large metro region, reveals potential challenges for budgeting, management, and maintenance. An exploration of the mitigation potential of adaptation strategies shows that expedited repair times are capable of offsetting the additional outages from climate change, but will come with a cost.
AB - With projected temperature increases and extreme events due to climate change for many regions of the world, characterizing the impacts of these emerging hazards on water distribution systems is necessary to identify and prioritize adaptation strategies for ensuring reliability. To aid decision-making, new insights are needed into how water distribution system reliability to climate-driven heat will change, and the proactive maintenance strategies available to combat failures. To this end, we present the model Perses, a framework that joins a water distribution network hydraulic solver with reliability models of physical assets or components to estimate temperature increase-driven failures and resulting service outages in the long term. A theoretical case study is developed using Phoenix, Arizona temperature profiles, a city with extreme temperatures and a rapidly expanding infrastructure. By end-of-century under hotter futures there are projected to be 1%-5% more pump failures, 2%-5% more PVC pipe failures, and 3%-7% more iron pipe failures (RCP 4.5-8.5) than a baseline historical temperature profile. Service outages, which constitute inadequate pressure for domestic and commercial use are projected to increase by 16%-26% above the baseline under maximum temperature conditions. The exceedance of baseline failures, when compounded across a large metro region, reveals potential challenges for budgeting, management, and maintenance. An exploration of the mitigation potential of adaptation strategies shows that expedited repair times are capable of offsetting the additional outages from climate change, but will come with a cost.
KW - climate change
KW - heat and temperature
KW - infrastructure
KW - reliability, risk, and resilience
KW - water distribution
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U2 - 10.1088/2634-4505/ac8ba3
DO - 10.1088/2634-4505/ac8ba3
M3 - Article
SN - 2634-4505
VL - 2
JO - Environmental Research: Infrastructure and Sustainability
JF - Environmental Research: Infrastructure and Sustainability
IS - 4
M1 - 045002
ER -