Abstract
Risk assessment for water resource planning must deal with the uncertainty associated with excess/scarcity situations and their costs. The projected actions for increasing water security usually involve an indirect "call-effect": the territory occupation/water use is increased following the achieved protection. In this work, flood and water demand in a mountainous semi-arid watershed in southern Spain are assessed by means of the stochastic simulation of extremes, when this human factor is/is not considered. The results show how not including this call-effect induced an underestimation of flood risk after protecting the floodplain of between 35 and 78% in a 35-year planning horizon. Similarly, the pursued water availability of a new reservoir resulted in a 10-year scarcity risk increase up to 38% when the trend of expanding the irrigated area was included in the simulations. These results highlight the need for including this interaction in the decision-making assessment. Copyright © 2014 IAHS Press.
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Polo, M. J., Aguilar, C., Millares, A., Herrero, J., Gomez-Beas, R., Contreras, E., & Losada, M. A. (2014). Assessing risks for integrated water resource management: Coping with uncertainty and the human factor. In IAHS-AISH Proceedings and Reports (Vol. 364, pp. 285–291). IAHS Press. https://doi.org/10.5194/piahs-364-285-2014
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