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E-grāmata: Review of the New York City Department of Environmental Protection Operations Support Tool for Water Supply

  • Formāts: 214 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 11-Dec-2018
  • Izdevniecība: National Academies Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780309482806
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  • Formāts: 214 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 11-Dec-2018
  • Izdevniecība: National Academies Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780309482806

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New York City's water supply system is one of the oldest, largest, and most complex in the nation. It delivers more than 1.1 billion gallons of water each day from three upstate watersheds (Croton, Catskill, and Delaware) to meet the needs of more than eight million people in the City, one million people in Westchester, Putnam, Orange, and Ulster counties, and millions of commuters and tourists who visit the City throughout the year. The Catskill and Delaware portions, which make up about 90 percent of the supply, receive no filtration or treatment other than disinfection, except for rare instances of high turbidity when a coagulant is added to increase deposition of suspended solids. The remaining 10 percent of the supply comes from the Croton watershed and receives treatment via filtration.





The drinking water supply is managed by the Bureau of Water Supply within the New York City Department of Environmental Protection (NYC DEP). To continue to avoid filtration of the Catskill/Delaware portion of the water supply, in 2007, NYC DEP reexamined its control of turbidity in the Catskill portion of the water supply, including both structural improvements to the system and operational changes. The Operations Support Tool (OST) was developed as part of these efforts. OST couples models of reservoir operations and water quality; it uses real-time data on streamflow, snow pack, water quality, reservoir levels, diversions, and releases; and it incorporates streamflow forecastsall in order to predict future reservoir levels, water delivery to customers, and water quality within the system. These predictions inform the system operators, who then make decisions based on the most current data and forecasts.





This report reviews the use of OST in current and future reservoir operations. It considers potential ways in which the City can more effectively use OST, makes recommendations for additional performance measures, and reviews the potential effects of climate change on the City's water supply to help identify and enhance understanding of areas of potential future concern with regard to the use of OST.

Table of Contents



Front Matter Summary 1 Introduction 2 Description of the Operations Support Tool 3 Metrics for the Catskill Turbidity Control Program 4 Use of OST Within the Environmental Impact Statement for Modifications to the Catalum SPDES Permit 5 Use of OST in a Changing Climate 6 Enhancements and Future Uses of OST Appendix A: Observed Hydrologic Trends Appendix B: Use of Climate and Hydrologic Models for Projecting Future Water Resources Appendix C: Glossary of Terms Appendix D: Biographical Sketches of Committee Members and Staff
Summary 1(12)
1 Introduction
13(30)
Description of the New York City Water Supply
13(11)
Regulatory Framework
24(9)
Overview of System Operations
33(3)
Origin of the Study
36(4)
References
40(3)
2 Description of the Operations Support Tool
43(54)
Overview of the Operations Support Tool
43(10)
OST Data Flow and Outputs
53(3)
Models Used in OST
56(13)
How OST Is Used by NYC DEP
69(6)
OST Data Input
75(13)
Validation of OST
88(3)
Conclusions and Recommendations
91(2)
References
93(4)
3 Metrics for the Catskill Turbidity Control Program
97(18)
Background
98(3)
Catskill Turbidity Control Study
101(2)
Catskill Turbidity Control Program
103(2)
Performance Measures
105(6)
Conclusions and Recommendations
111(1)
References
112(3)
4 Use of OST within the Environmental Impact Statement for Modifications to the Catalum Spdes Permit
115(16)
Background on Environmental Impact Statements
115(1)
EIS and the Catalum SPDES Permit
116(6)
Use of OST in the EIS
122(6)
Conclusions and Recommendations
128(1)
References
129(2)
5 Use of OST in a Changing Climate
131(28)
Observations of a Changing Climate: Impacts on Catskill and Delaware Watersheds in Context
132(5)
Global- and Regional-Scale Projections of Climate Change
137(2)
Improving the Utility of OST for Continued Use as an Operational Decision Support Tool
139(4)
Using OST in Simulation Mode to Better Plan for Impacts of Climate Change on the NYC Water Supply
143(8)
Coordination Beyond NYC DEP
151(1)
Conclusions and Recommendations
152(1)
References
153(6)
6 Enhancements and Future uses of OST
159(8)
Use of OST to Capture Existing Staff Knowledge and Expertise
159(2)
Use of OST as a Training Tool
161(1)
Long-Term Planning Under a Range of Future Conditions
161(1)
Use of OST to Support Compliance with the Filtration Avoidance Determination
162(1)
Use of OST to Manage Other Water Quality Metrics
163(1)
Use of OST to Help Illuminate and Frame Research Questions
164(1)
Communication About OST and How It Is Used
165(1)
References
165(2)
Appendixes
A Observed Hydrologic Trends
167(12)
B Use of Climate and Hydrologic Models for Projecting Future Water Resources
179(12)
C Glossary of Terms
191(4)
D Biographical Sketches of Committee Members and Staff
195