May-June 2009

Tooling Up for Drought Planning

GIS and satellite imagery have become an integral part of drought monitoring and planning, preparedness, and mitigation.

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By Lyn Corum

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Geza Kisch, a consultant with GreenWorld explained that water districts typically ask his company to work with private developers to comply with the new law. While the private water users pay them, the water district typically reimburses the users as part of an incentive program.

Kisch says when landscaping is being designed for a new park or school site, for example, the design submitted to the city has to guarantee that the performance of the physical irrigation system will match what the design promises. Once the landscaping is installed, the water district will monitor the water usage. This process will reduce water usage 50% on average, Kisch says, depending on specific locations and consumption.

Furthermore, Kisch explains, information on evapotranspiration (ET) will be free and provided by the state of California. Every controller can be adjusted on a daily basis by downloading the latest ET data. 

Before GIS and satellite imagery were available, the correct distribution of water coming from sprinkler heads was hard to determine and led to wasted water. Electronic water audits were inaccurate and unrepeatable, because they sampled only certain areas, offering a very limited view of water distribution. “The two largest causes of water waste have been between design and installation, and in the operation,” he says. Water usage can be two to three times more than the design intended.

Kisch explains that now, using his company’s GIS software, every sprinkler head can be located accurately. It eliminates the gap between design and installation and operation. All kinds of data, such as rainfall, soil infiltration, and content, are digitized and fed into the software, even aerial photographs, to create a three dimensional model of the area to be irrigated. Once controllers equipped to handle these data are installed the design model is downloaded into them. The controllers are then driven by the software-modeled climate data to turn the sprinklers on and off accordingly. “If you don’t connect spatial distribution to a controller, the controller is useless,” he says.

Smart controllers that can handle GIS modeling data have been coming on the market in the last two years, Kisch says. There are now perhaps three models that qualify. Furthermore, these controllers can be connected to a Web site that monitors all sites on a daily basis. Managers then can see which sites are under the water budget and which are over. The Metropolitan Water District in southern California already has a $15-million rebate program to replace old, non-compliant controllers free of charge.

National Agencies 
At NCDC, where Heim works, weather data from across the country and the world is archived and compared with historical data to put our current climate into perspective.  NCDC’s motto is “Protecting the Past, Revealing the Future.” It produces numerous climate publications and responds to data requests from all over the world. NCDC also supports a three-tier national climate services support program in partnership with the Regional Climate Centers and State Climatologists.

Heim says several different offices create satellite products. For example, VegDRI, the Vegetation Drought Response Index, which Heim describes as “a wonderful little product,” uses satellite observations coordinated with actual weather conditions, topography, and soil types to monitor and assess vegetation health.

The NDMC was established in 1995 to help people and institutions develop and implement measures to reduce societal vulnerability to drought. It is headquartered at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln and is independent of state or federal government. However, it is a major collaborator with NOAA’s NCDC.

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Mark Svoboda is a climatologist at NDMC who specializes in remote sensing and GIS technology. “Our overall mission is to plan for risk vulnerability to drought,” he says.  “We will never have a dense enough coverage of...the whole US using ground data. We have to use other remote sensing tools to gain a full snapshot of what is going on [throughout the country].”

Overlaying satellite imagery with what he calls “ground truth,” i.e. weather station data, soil types, and such, gives planners a better feeling with what modeling is telling them. “The more tools at our disposal, the more knowledge we will have,” says Svoboda. Next Page >

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