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    Sustainable surface water storage development: measuring economic benefits and ecological and social impacts of reservoir system configurations

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    Authors
    Eriyagama, Nishadi
    Smakhtin, V.
    Udamulla, L.
    Date
    2022-01
    Language
    en
    Type
    Journal Article
    Review status
    Peer Review
    ISI journal
    Accessibility
    Open Access
    Usage rights
    CC-BY-4.0
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    Citation
    Eriyagama, Nishadi; Smakhtin, V.; Udamulla, L. 2022. Sustainable surface water storage development: measuring economic benefits and ecological and social impacts of reservoir system configurations. Water, 14(3):307. (Special issue: Relationship of Energy and Water Resource Availability) [doi: https://doi.org/10.3390/w14030307]
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/117854
    External link to download this item: https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/14/3/307/pdf
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/w14030307
    Abstract/Description
    This paper illustrates an approach to measuring economic benefits and ecological and social impacts of various configurations of reservoir systems for basin-wide planning. It suggests indicators and examines their behavior under several reservoir arrangement scenarios using two river basins in Sri Lanka as examples. A river regulation index is modified to take into account the volume of flow captured by reservoirs and their placement and type. Indices of connectivity illustrate that the lowest river connectivity in a basin results from a single new reservoir placed on the main stem of a previously unregulated river between the two locations that command 50% and 75% of the basin area. The ratio of the total affected population to the total number of beneficiaries is shown to increase as the cumulative reservoir capacity in a river basin increases. An integrated index comparing the performance of different reservoir system configurations shows that while results differ from basin to basin, the cumulative effects of a large number of small reservoirs may be comparable to those with a few large reservoirs, especially at higher storage capacities.
    CGIAR Author ORCID iDs
    Nishadi Eriyagamahttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-4493-5284
    Other CGIAR Affiliations
    Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security; Water, Land and Ecosystems
    AGROVOC Keywords
    surface water; water storage; economic benefits; ecological factors; social impact; water reservoirs; river basins; sustainability; equity
    Countries
    Sri Lanka
    Regions
    Southern Asia
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