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Using information-gap decision theory for water resources planning under severe uncertainty

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posted on 2025-07-31, 14:48 authored by B Korteling, S Dessai, Z Kapelan
Water resource managers are required to develop comprehensive water resources plans based on severely uncertain information of the effects of climate change on local hydrology and future socio-economic changes on localised demand. In England and Wales, current water resources planning methodologies include a headroom estimation process separate from water resource simulation modelling. This process quantifies uncertainty based on only one point of an assumed range of deviations from the expected climate and projected demand 25 years into the future. This paper utilises an integrated method based on Information-Gap decision theory to quantitatively assess the robustness of various supply side and demand side management options over a broad range of plausible futures. Findings show that beyond the uncertainty range explored with the headroom method, a preference reversal can occur, i. e. some management options that underperform at lower uncertainties, outperform at higher levels of uncertainty. This study also shows that when 50 % or more of the population adopts demand side management, efficiency related measures and innovative options such as rainwater collection can perform equally well or better than some supply side options The additional use of Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis shifts the focus away from reservoir expansion options, that perform best in regards to water availability, to combined strategies that include innovative demand side management actions of rainwater collection and greywater reuse as well efficiency measures and additional regional transfers. This paper illustrates how an Information-Gap based approach can offer a comprehensive picture of potential supply/demand futures and a rich variety of information to support adaptive management of water systems under severe uncertainty. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht.

Funding

The authors are grateful to three anonymous referees for their detailed comments. Any errors remain our own. Brett Korteling is supported by the University of Exeter’s Climate Change and Sustainable Futures theme. South West Water are thanked for their generosity in terms of their time and data. Suraje Dessai was supported by the ARCC-Water project funded by EPSRC (EP/G061181/1) and the EQUIP project funded by NERC (NE/H003509/1).

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© Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2012. This is the final version of an open access article. Available from Springer via the DOI in this record.

Notes

Published Journal Article

Journal

Water Resources Management

Publisher

Springer Verlag

Language

en

Citation

Vol. 27, pp. 1149-1172

Department

  • Engineering

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