ASSESSMENT OF SURFACE WATER POTENTIAL AND DEMAND EVALUATION IN TEJI WATERSHED, UPPER AWASH RIVER SUB-BASIN, ETHIOPIA
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Date
2022-10-27
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Hawassa University
Abstract
In Teji watershed the livelihoods of the dense population are confirmed on the river
streamflow. The competition for water resources between water users has prominently led
unbalanced water demand and a limited supply that resulted in serious conflicts between
water users. The goal of this study was to assess the surface water potential and evaluate
demands using the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) and Water Evaluation and
Planning (WEAP). The 12.5 m x 12.5 m resolution DEM was used in watershed delineation
and multiple slope classification and the 30 m x 30 m land use/cover, soil data, were used to
hydrologic response unit classification. The watershed divided into 9 sub-basins, and 123
hydrological response units were identified. The model was calibrated with 2000-2010 data
and twelve most sensitive flow parameters which gave very good correlation between
observed and simulated streamflow with statistical criteria Coefficient of determination
(R2=0.81), Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency (NSE=0.81) and Percent BIAS (PBias=+1.6). The
model validation was carried out for the year 2011-2016 data and the model performance
was resulted very good correlations between observed and simulated streamflow. The
performance criterial of the model, R2, NSE and PBias were 0.77, 0.78 and +2.3
respectively. The mean annual water balance were simulated with a mean precipitation of
1039.30mm. Surface runoff, lateral flow, and groundwater flow were 198.63 mm (19 %),
28.78 mm (2.8%), and 17.53 mm (1.9%), respectively. The mean evaporation losses of the
area were estimated as 461.40 mm which accounting for 44.34% of the mean annual water
budget. The mean annual surface runoff of the watershed was 130.25 MCM. WEAP model
was run to evaluate the current and future water demand under four different scenarios. At
the current account year (2021) about 43.22 MCM of water was required for all water
demands. The future water demand evaluation shows water supply deficit in all developed
scenarios. Scenarios show that in each water demands there would be both monthly and
annually unmet water demands. However, the absolute deficits were varied between
scenarios.
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Keywords
Teji watershed, Surface water potential, water demand, SWAT and WEAP
