r. pulwarty , j. verdin , l. darby, c. mcnutt and the nidis implementation team
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R. Pulwarty , J. Verdin , L. Darby, C. McNutt and the NIDIS Implementation Team. The National Integrated Drought Information System. Overview of NIDIS NIDIS Act of 2006 NIDIS Objectives & Structure Drought Portal NIDIS Pilot Projects - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
R. Pulwarty, J. Verdin, L. Darby, C. McNutt and the NIDIS Implementation Team
The National Integrated Drought Information System
o Overview of NIDISo NIDIS Act of 2006o NIDIS Objectives & Structureo Drought Portalo NIDIS Pilot Projects
o Summary of the Lake Blackshear and Apalachicola River & Bay Meetings
o Overview of Goals and Objectives of the Meetingo ACF Data Committee
National Integrated Drought Information System
Public Law 109-430 (The NIDIS Act 2006)
“Enable the Nation to move from a reactive to a more proactive approach to managing drought risks and impacts”
www.drought.gov
“Drought is the most obstinate and pernicious of the dramatic events that Nature conjures up. It can last longer and extend across larger areas than
hurricanes, tornadoes, floods and earth quakes…causing hundreds of millions of dollars in losses, and dashing hopes and dreams.”
US National Drought Policy Commission Report, May 2000
“better informed and more timely drought-related decisions leading to reduced impacts and costs”
National Integrated Drought Information System
VISION and GOALS
“A dynamic and accessible drought information system that provides users with the ability to determine the potential impacts of drought and the associated risks they bring, and the decision support tools needed to better prepare for and mitigate the effects of drought.”
Public Law 109-430 (Signed by the President December 2006)
(www.drought.gov)
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NIDIS Objectives
Creating a drought early warning information systemo Coordinating national drought monitoring and
forecasting systems o Providing an interactive drought information
clearinghouse and delivery system for products and services—including an internet portal and standardized products (databases, forecasts, Geographic Information Systems (GIS), maps, etc)
o Designing mechanisms for improving and incorporating information to support coordinated preparedness and planning
NIDIS: What it is and isn’t• NIDIS isn’t……
a regulatory program and doesn’t establish minimum flow requirements a decision maker that tells you how to plan for drought
• Will not dictate indicators and triggers that should be used a mediator between conflicting interests a mechanism for declaring drought
• NIDIS is charged with….. providing better coordination for existing national drought monitoring
and forecasting systems• Also, informs how to improve these systems
providing data, products, and processes that inform existing planning and preparedness efforts
providing an interactive drought information clearinghouse and delivery system for products and services
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NIDIS Governance: Executive Council
NIDIS Program Office NIDIS Implementation Team: Over 50 Federal, state, tribal and private sector
representatives
NIDIS Technical Working Groups
Integrated Drought Information Systems Drought Early Warning System Design-Information clearinghouse, Pilots, and Implementation
WATERSHED/URBAN/LOCAL
REGIONAL
NATIONAL
Public AwarenessAnd Education
Engaging PreparednessCommunities
IntegratedMonitoring and
Forecasting
InterdisciplinaryResearch andApplications
U.S.Drought Portal
Drought and Water Resources Federal Partnerships
Monitoring & ForecastingDrought and Flood Impacts
Assessments and Scenarios
Communication and Outreach Engaging Preparedness & Adaptation
NIDIS-Information Services in support of Adaptation
Key Clearinghouse Functions:Credible, Accessible, Timely Information on
Where are drought conditions now?Does this event look like other events?
How is the drought affecting me?Will the drought continue?Where can I go for help?
The NIDIS U.S. Drought Portal (www.drought.gov)
Portlet example: NWS River Forecast Center
Ohio River Water Resources Outlook-Ecosystem recovery
Recovery
Missouri
Oklahoma
Montana
Chesapeake Bay
NIDIS Early Warning Systems PilotsHighlighted-first round prototypes;
Others-Regional DEWS & transferability
Southeast
Colorado River Basin
California
Columbia River Basin
Great PlainsGreat Lakes
Tennessee Valley
From Pilots to a National DEWS
Southeast
Colorado River Basin
California
Prototyping approaches/methods
Regional DEWS:Chesapeake Bay; Great Plains; Tennessee Valley; Montana; Columbia River Basin etc.
National DEWS Transferability
o Categories of drought information users & scales of analysis
Pilot ImplementationUpper Colorado River Basin:
o Upper Basin down to Lake Mead: Large reservoir operations and triggers (full basin
scale)o Large reservoir operations and triggers
(Powell/Mead)o Sub-basin:o Inter- and Intra-basin transfers; Front
range urban-agriculture-Changing water demand during drought
o Ecosystem health/services including recreation and tourism impacts
Kremmling
Federal National Center for Atmospheric
Research (NCAR) National Drought Mitigation Center
(NDMC) USDA: Natural Resources
Conservation Service USFS: Region 2 USBR: Eastern Colorado Area
Office, Great Plains Region, Office of Policy and Programs, Research and Development
USGS: Colorado Water Science Center, Central Region, Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center
NOAA: ESRL, NCEP, NCDC, NWS
Pilot ImplementationUpper Colorado River Basin:Scoping Workshop, Boulder CO, October 2008
State/Local Colorado Division of Water
Resources (CDWR) Colorado State Climatologist Colorado River Water
Conservation District (CRWCD) Colorado Water Conservation
Board (CWCB) CU – Western Water Assessment,
CIRES, and CADSWES Denver Water Board Northern Colorado Water
Conservancy District (NCWCD) Wyoming State Engineer Wyoming State Climatologist Utah State Climatologist Desert Research Institute/WRCC
Actions from the Scoping Workshop• Inventory and assessment of drought indicators and
triggers presently used in the UCRB• Develop a UCRB-specific drought monitor• Facilitate web access to indicator and trigger
observational data and information products• Perform a monitoring networks gap analysis for the
UCRB• Develop new/improved monitoring and impacts
information
NIDIS – Upper Colorado River Basin Pilot
Interviews and Focus Groupsconducted by the Colorado Climate Center exploring drought
indicators, triggers and data needs by sector
• USBR (Grand Junction and Loveland offices)• Colorado Division of Wildlife• Colorado DNR (state and local)• Denver Water and other smaller water providers• Northwest Council of Governments (water quality)• Watershed protection groups• USDI (BLM, NPS) and other resource managers• Colorado River Water Conservation District• Northern Colorado Water Conservancy District • EXCEL Energy• Grand County interest group• Summit County interest group• Fraser Experimental Forest• Water Availability Task Force• Winter Park Resorts and other ski area representatives• Other (discussed with WY and UT State Climatologists, but no
interviews with users outside Colorado)
General Findings• Results vary by sector and by individual user based on “exposure to
drought risk” and most (not all) users track available hydro-climatic data and projections from existing sources, at least at critical times of year
• Water rights and the prior appropriation doctrine dictates “exposure and potential risk and impacts” for pretty much all surface water users. River “calls” are the ultimate triggers and indicators
• Operators of the major reservoirs systematically said “our jobs are easiest during drought but our critical decisions and errors are made during high flows”
• Most surface water interests said “I’m not that worried about drought in this basin until it is at least a 3-year drought
• Drought indices are less likely to be used in decision making but more likely to be used for general comparison with other geographic regions and to communicate to the public or to non technical oversight groups (Boards) why drought actions like conservation or curtailment may be needed
Requested information by users
• More detailed local monitoring better forecasts “hand holding” for interpretation and application of
complex drought information (including the use of available indexes)
better elevational knowledge of precip and anomalies better historical perspective on streamflow and
reservoir data easier one-stop shopping for all information inclusion of water demand emphasis on “Familiar Analogs” “It is now as dry as
19__”
Other UCRB Activities• NRCS Revised Surface Water Supply
Index (SWSI) for Colorado• Partnership with CUAHSI to Develop
Drought Index System Architecture• Integrate CPC objective climate forecasts
into RFC Ensemble Streamflow Predictions (ESP)
• UCRB Water Demand Spatial Analysis• Reconciling Projections of 21st Century
Colorado River Flows• Coordination with Colorado Water
Conservation Board and Revision of State Drought Mitigation and Response Plan
Year 2 ActionsPrototyping/gaming: Given better data and information
coordination, would responses have been improved for past events? Assess:
1. Value of improved information using past conditions2. Responses for projections/scenarios (seasons,
decadal, change)3. Develop EWS Fora4. Feedback on priorities (e.g. data gaps) to Executive
Council
Pilot ImplementationUpper Colorado River Basin
UCRB Summary• Identified set of common problems• Assessing gaps in monitoring, forecasting,
and data dissemination• How do people in the UCRB think about
drought• Critical Research Questions• Ways to Improve Coordination &
Preparedness• Evaluation: Do people make better decisions
with better information
• Southeast United States Pilot Chapel Hill – July 2009 Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint (ACF) Basin Scoping
Workshop – Lake Blackshear, GA – Dec 2009
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Pilot ImplementationSoutheast US
Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint Catawba-Wateree Yadkin-Pee Dee
ACF Scoping Workshop OverviewLake Blackshear, GA
Dec 2/3, 2009
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ACF Stakeholders Organization Alabama Office of Water Resources Apalachicola Riverkeeper Auburn University Agriculture Extension Department of Natural Resource Environmental Protection Agency Georgia Environmental Protection Division Joseph W. Jones Ecological Research Center Muscogee Nation of Florida National Drought Mitigation Center, University of Nebraska NOAANorthwest Florida Water Management District Southeast Indigenous Peoples' Center Southern Co. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service U.S. Geological Survey University of Alabama-HuntsvilleUniversity of Georgia University of South Carolina
Agencies represented at the Lake Blackshear meeting
Key issues for the Pilot to address, as determined by attendees at the Lake Blackshear meeting:
• Gaps in understanding Water availability and demand The role of groundwater in the basin water budget
• Gaps in measurements Perform a data inventory for the basin (Led by Pam Knox) Determine what data gaps need to be filled for adequate basin-scale coverage
• Presentation of information Present water information with high visual impact (e.g., demonstrate the impacts
of different lake levels or river flows on recreational use with easy to understand graphics)
Present water information at the basin scale Data related to drought monitoring and forecasting should be made available at a
single user-friendly web site
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Key issues for the Pilot to address, as determined by attendees at the Lake Blackshear meeting (con’t):• Education
Educate the public about the causes and impacts of drought throughout the basin Educate the state legislatures so they understand drought adequately enough to
make decisions that enhance the states' response to drought• Drought Indicators
Develop drought indicators that accurately represent the current stage of drought (e.g., various lake levels at Lake Lanier can be tied to different stages of drought)
Make sure this drought indicator information is accessible and understandable to the public
• Forecasting Ensemble Streamflow Prediction models need low-flow calibrations Develop a low-flow data base and products for assessing and forecasting
drought
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Upper Chattahoochee
Middle Chattahoochee-Flint
Apalachicola River & Bay
ACF Basin Workshops & Meetings ACF Scoping Workshop – Lake Blackshear, GA: Dec
2009 Army Corps of Engineers – Mobile, AL: March 2010 Apalachicola Sub-basin – Apalachicola, FL: April 2010 Middle Chattahoochee & Flint Sub-basin - GA : May
2010• Intertribal Meeting – Tama Creek Reservation, GA:
June/July 2010• Upper Chattahoochee - Sub-basin: June 2010• Full basin – Fall 2010?
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Apalachicola River & BayApril 27/28, 2010
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Apalachicola National Estuarine Research Reserve Apalachicola Riverkeeper City of Apalachicola Florida Department of Environmental Protection Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission Florida Sea Grant Extension Franklin County Florida State University National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Northwest Florida Water Management District Southern Nuclear University of Florida
Apalachicola River & BayApril 27/28, 2010
Agencies represented…
Recommended Actions or Items to Investigate
1. Data Water balance by region and sector Consolidate data across sources for streamflows, water table
depth, reservoir evaporation and reservoir levels Basin inflow information Water use information, particularly agricultural use Groundwater pumping rates from GA QA/QC issues for the 3 gages on the Apalachicola that are
maintained by the Corps USGS has invited other agencies to submit well data to the
US Climate Response Network; USGS will compute stats, etc.
Recommended Actions2. Develop and provide general public with drought
information -- data visualizations, historical comparisons, educational materials
3. Fill information gaps Seasonal precipitation forecasts in November, reassess
by mid-February Improved forecasts for summer, northern basin Assess stakeholders – information needs, possible
applications Value of water to natural ecosystems and ecosystem
services and biological drought impacts Plain English interpretations of technical products
released by the NWS
Recommended Actions
4. Can we have input into the Corps water control manual?
Incorporation of ENSO phase effects Drought recovery
• Refill issues once the rain has started again
Possible Tools & Mechanisms
5. Groundwater and Corps lake levels available at one web site, with enough data to provide historical context
6. Tri-state webinars to review ACF basin met and hydro data; could feed into the drought monitor via drought monitor author participation
7. Public discussion boards for drought Something for the general public Something for more technical folks
8. Climate outlook presentations to ACF Stakeholders
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Possible areas for Research
9. Drought Indicators Develop indicators for entering a dry period Learn more about how to relate the timing of drought
onset to impacts – connect to physical data10.Flows needed for endangered species
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Workshop GoalsMiddle Chattahoochee & Flint River Basins
Workshop Goals• This is the second of 3 sub-basin meetings – we will be
combining information learned from this meeting with information learned at the other two meetings Information sharing
• Background about the Middle Chattahoochee & Flint River Basins
• Lessons learned during previous droughts Brainstorming & discussions
• How can we make dealing with the next drought easier?• Using your post-drought 20/20 vision, what would have made
your job easier during the last drought? Pulling it all together
• What are 3 or 4 activities or products that we should consider as key pieces in the design of a drought early warning information system for the ACF basin?
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Steering Committee• John Christy, AL State Climatologist, Univ. of Alabama• Stan Cook, Chief of Fisheries, DCNR• Keith Ingram, Univ. of Florida• Inchul Kim, GA EPD• Tom Littlepage, ADECA• Mark Masters, H2O Policy Center• Jim Phillips, Middle Chattahoochee Water Coalition• Lynn Sisk, Chief, Water Quality Branch, Water Division,
ADEM• Puneet Srivastava, Assoc. Professor of Ecological
Engineering, Auburn University
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ACF Data Committee
NIDIS ACF Data Group Activities
• Group contains about 15 members• Met three times by teleconference• Set up a Google Docs spreadsheet of data
sets that group can edit and enrich
• Currently discussing how to disseminate the dataset and solicit contributions from other user groups and stakeholders
Dataset Spreadsheet
Categories of data collected:
» Remotely sensed observations» satellite, lidar, radar
» Surface-based observations» weather, hydrology, soils
» Biological datasets» fish populations, plant surveys
» Reanalysis and model datasets» PRISM climate, salinity models
Sample of database
Next steps
• We need additional input of data sets to improve the database• We are exploring the development of a user group on Google or
Drought.org for ongoing dialog and suggestions• We are developing informational material to bring to conferences
and post online• Identify who is using the data and information• Identify monitoring and information gaps and how delivery could be
improved
Please help us expand our spreadsheet!Contact Pam Knox, [email protected]
706-542-6067