Browsing by Author "Duchin, Faye"
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- Applying a Coupled Hydrologic-Economic Modeling Framework: Evaluating Alternative Options for Reducing Impacts for Downstream Locations in Response to Upstream DevelopmentAmaya, Maria; Duchin, Faye; Hester, Erich; Little, John C. (MDPI, 2022-05-28)Economic input-output and watershed models provide useful results, but these kinds of models do not use the same spatial units, which typically limits their integration. A modular hydrologic-economic modeling framework is designed to couple the Rectangular Choice-of-Technology (RCOT) model, a physically constrained, input-output (I-O) model, with the Hydrological Simulation Program-Fortran (HSPF). Integrating these two models can address questions relevant to both economists and hydrologists, beyond addressing only administrative or watershed concerns. This framework is utilized to evaluate alternative future development prospects within Fauquier County, northern Virginia, specifically residential build-up, and agricultural intensification in the upstream location of the local watershed. Scenarios are designed to evaluate the downstream impacts on watershed health caused by upstream development and changes made within the economic sectors in response to these impacts. In the first case, an alternative residential water technology is more efficient than the standard for ensuring adequate water supply downstream. For scenarios involving upstream agricultural intensification, a crop shift from grains to fruits and vegetables is the most efficient of the alternatives considered. This framework captures two-way feedback between watershed and economic systems that expands the types of questions one can address beyond those that can be analyzed using these models individually.
- Applying a coupled hydrologic-economic modeling framework: Evaluating conjunctive use strategies for alleviating seasonal watershed impacts caused by agricultural intensificationAmaya, Maria; Duchin, Faye; Hester, Erich; Little, John C. (Frontiers, 2022-08-22)Economic models and watershed models provide useful results, but when seeking to integrate these systems, the temporal units typically utilized by these models must be reconciled. A hydrologic-economic modeling framework is built to couple the Hydrological Simulation Program-Fortran (HSPF), representing the watershed system, with the Rectangular Choice-of-Technology (RCOT) model, an extension of the basic input-output (I-O) model. This framework is implemented at different sub-annual timesteps to gain insight in selecting temporal units best suited for addressing questions of interest to both economists and hydrologists. Scenarios are designed to examine seasonal increases in nitrogen concentration that occur because of agricultural intensification in Cedar Run Watershed, located in Fauquier County, northern Virginia. These scenarios also evaluate the selection among surface water, groundwater, or a mix of (conjunctive use) practices for irrigation within the crop farming sector in response to these seasonal impacts. When agricultural intensification occurs in Cedar Run Watershed, implementing conjunctive use in irrigation reduces the seasonal increases in nitrogen concentration to specified limits. The most efficient of the conjunctive use strategies explicitly considered varies depending on which timestep is utilized in the scenario: a bi-annual timestep (wet and dry season) vs. a seasonal timestep. This modeling framework captures the interactions between watershed and economic systems at a temporal resolution that expands the range of questions one can address beyond those that can be analyzed using the individual models linked in this framework.
- A Coupled Hydrologic-Economic Modeling Framework for Evaluating Alternative Options for Reducing Watershed Impacts in Response to Future Development PatternsAmaya, Maria Teresa (Virginia Tech, 2022-04-28)Economic input-output (I-O) and watershed models provide useful results but when seeking to integrate these systems, the structural, spatial, and temporal differences between these models must be carefully considered. To reconcile these differences, a hydrologic-economic modeling framework is designed to couple an economic model with a watershed model. A physically constrained, I-O model, RCOT, is used to represent the economic system in this framework because it provides sectoral detail for a regional economy and calculates physical resource quantities used by these sectors. Uniquely, it also allows for technology options for all sectors and minimizes the resource use based on environmental constraints imposed by the watershed, which adds complexity to the representation of the economic system and its interactions with the watershed system. To represent the watershed system in this framework, the Hydrological Simulation Program-Fortran (HSPF) is used. An HSPF model has been calibrated to represent the hydrological processes of Cedar Run Watershed by the Occoquan Watershed Monitoring Laboratory (OWML). Thus, the capabilities of this framework are demonstrated using strategic scenarios developed to examine future development patterns that may occur within Fauquier County, northern Virginia, and its local basin, Cedar Run Watershed. The scenarios evaluate both the downstream and seasonal impacts on water flow and nitrogen concentration within the watershed, and the changes made within the economic system in response to these impacts. For these scenarios, the most efficient solution is the one that minimizes the use of resource inputs within the economic sectors, including developed land, water withdrawn, and applied nitrogen, which in turn inform watershed health. The scenario results demonstrate that this coupled hydrologic-economic modeling framework can overcome the spatial differences of the individual models and can capture the interactions between watershed and economic systems at a temporal resolution that expands the types of questions one can address beyond those that can be analyzed using these models separately.