SURFACE WATER AVAILABILITY AND SCENARIO BASED DEMAND ASSESSMENT OF THE KELETA RIVER WATERSHED, AWASH RIVER BASIN, ETHIOPIA
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Date
2020-10-25
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Hawassa University
Abstract
The ever-increasing world population, changes in the living standard and consumption
pattern, and the rapid expansion of irrigation agriculture exert a lot of pressure on water
resources. Irrigation, the major water user, relies mostly on surface water from the Awash
River and its tributaries and it is very important to assess surface water potential at this
basin. This study was conducted at Keleta River Watershed, which is found in the Upper
Awash River Basin of Ethiopia. The main objective of this study was to assess the surface
water availability and scenario-based water demand assessment in the Watershed using the
Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) and Water Evaluation and Planning System (WEAP)
models. The SWAT and WEAP models were used to estimate the surface water availability
and scenario base users’ water demands in Keleta River Watershed, respectively. The SWAT
model was calibrated and validated using observed streamflow data to get reliably predicted
streamflow values. The model performance was evaluated employing two error indices called
Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency (NSE) and coefficient of determination (R2
). The results showed that
the mean annual precipitation, actual evapotranspiration, and potential evapotranspiration
were 831.1, 451.4, and 1180.4 mm, respectively in Keleta Watershed. The estimated surface
runoff available from the entire catchment was 124.50 million cubic meters (MCM), which
was equivalent to 165 mm depth of mean annual runoff. The assessment of water demand was
done based on the current and projected future scenarios. The identified sectors of water
users in the watershed were irrigation, livestock, domestic (rural and urban), public and
industrial demands. The scenarios evaluated what would be the water demand if the
population growth rate is 4% and the Irrigable area increases by 5% annually in the coming
25 years until 2045. The results showed that irrigation was found the highest water consumer
among the demand sites whereas the lowest was observed in the public demand site, which
consumed 42.22 and 0.63%, respectively from the total demand. The predicted water demand
increases by 83.55% in 2045 while the unmet demand increases from the current volume of
0.25 MCM to 7.65 MCM due to the expansion of the irrigable area as compared to the
reference scenario. Generally, the result indicated that the water demand as well as the unmet
demand increases in the Kelata watershed. The study shows that the water demands in
January, February, March, and April were found to be high as the supply was found to be low
during the same months. This indicates the temporal variation of supply and demand in the
Watershed. Water harvesting structure and groundwater development should be conducted to
supplement this water deficit
Description
Keywords
SWAT, WEAP, surface water, water demand, Keleta River
