Incorporating Climate Information and Stakeholder Engagement in Groundwater Resources Planning and Management
Planning to meet water demands in semi-arid regions is particularly challenging for groundwater dependent communities where aquifers are being replenished by intermittent streamflow events. Projected and observed climatic changes for the Southwest increase uncertainties. The proposed project employs a novel modeling framework and extensive stakeholder interactions to achieve the following three objectives: (1) Address climate uncertainties with a sophisticated modeling framework; (2) Increase stakeholder capacity to adapt water planning and management to future climate uncertainties; and (3) Establish the transferability of the modeling framework and capacity building approach.
The geographic focus is the Santa Cruz Active Management Area in south-central Arizona. On the border of Arizona with Sonora, Mexico, the city of Nogales, Arizona, and surrounding communities rely on water resources from a relatively shallow regional aquifer. Highly variable seasonal flow events on the Upper Santa Cruz River (USCR) are the main source of recharge to this aquifer and create a tightly linked relationship between localized aquifer conditions, streamflow variability, and regional climate patterns. Recognizing the interrelated hydrologic conditions, the Arizona Legislature formed the Santa Cruz Active Management Area (SCAMA) in 1994 and assigned the Arizona Department of Water Resources (ADWR) with the task of enforcing a two-part statutory management goal: a) Maintain a safe-yield condition in the active management area; and b) Prevent local water tables from experiencing long term declines.
To assist it in developing an understanding of regional aquifer conditions, ADWR created a model depicting localized and regional hydrologic conditions and interactions between surface flows and aquifer conditions. As required by state law, ADWR drafted Assured Water Supply (ASW) rules that have the potential to offer a leading example of sustainable management at multiple spatial scales. The adoption of the rules has been delayed. This delay is expected to be lengthy due to state budget cuts that have closed the SCAMA field office. The delay in rule adoption provides the project team with an opportunity to work with highly interested and knowledgeable stakeholders to incorporate greater climatic uncertainty in water planning and management. Through extensive work with stakeholders and agency personnel, this effort will demonstrate how groundwater management efforts, specifically the assured water supply program, can incorporate climate science/climate change information and surface water-groundwater connectivity.
Carlos Carillo - Ph.D Candidate, Dept. of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Arizona
Christopher Castro - Associate Professor, Dept. of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Arizona
Hsin-I Chang - Post Doctoral Researcher, Dept. of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Arizona
Karletta Chief - Associate Professor, Dept. of Soils, Water and Environmental Science, University of Arizona
Susanna Eden - Assistant Director, Water Resources Research Center
Sharon B Megdal - Director, Water Resources Research Center
Jacob Prietto - Graduate Outreach Assistant, Water Resources Research Center
Eylon Shamir - Hydrologic Engineer, Hydrologic Research Center
Project Team
- The Water Resources Research Center
- Hydrologic Research Center
- UA Hydrologic and Atmospheric Sciences
- UA Environment Science
Advisory Committee
- Arizona Department of Water Resources
- United States Geological Survey
- Salt River Project
- City of Nogales
Stakeholders
- UA Hydrologic and Atmospheric Sciences
- Pima County
- International Boundary and Water Commission
- The SouthEastern Arizona Governments Organization (SEAGO)
- Friends of the Santa Cruz River (FOSCR)
- Liberty Utilities
- Pima County Regional Flood Control District
- The Bureau of Land Management
- Sonoran Institute
- National Park Service
- City of Shuarita
- ASARCO
- Metro Water District
- Environmental Defence Fund
- Montgomery & Associates
- Clear Creek Associates
- Bureau of Reclamation
- Pima County Wastewater Reclamation
- Ballard Spahr
- Pima Association of Governments
- OOMAPAS Nogales
This work is funded under a grant from the Sectoral Applications Research Program (SARP) of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Climate Program Office. The views expressed represent those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of NOAA.
This work is funded under a grant from the Sectoral Applications Research Program (SARP) of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Climate Program Office. The views expressed represent those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of NOAA.