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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There have been droughts throughout history as Paleoclimatology tree ring investigations have discovered. In the 1200s in the Southwest United States in Anasazi territory, the drought lasted for multiple decades because of extremely low precipitation, according to Richard Heim, a meteorologist with the National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) in North Carolina, one of the divisions of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

In the 1930s, the drought in the Midwest lasted a decade. Serious drought conditions since then have peaked and gone away in the 1950s, the 1970s, and the 1980s. Since 1999, however, drought conditions have expanded, peaked, contracted, and peaked again. It is a drought that doesn’t want to go away—a balloon that expands and contracts like no other time—as Heim explains. Since 1980, major droughts and heat waves within the US alone have resulted in costs exceeding $100 billion, easily becoming one of the most costly weather-related disasters on the continent, according to a 2000 NCDC technical report penned by Neal Lott and Tom Ross.

Droughts in the US can be tracked for the past 100 years through the Palmer Drought Index. It is a soil moisture algorithm calibrated for relatively homogeneous regions and is used by many government agencies and states to trigger drought relief programs. At the end of January, the index calculated 24% of the US was in moderate to extreme drought.

With the development of geographic information system software and satellite imagery produced by the 16 meteorological satellites now orbiting the Earth, many different products and services have emerged, says Heim. NOAA’s National Environmental Satellite Data Information Service, NCDC’s parent agency, acquires and manages the nation’s operational environmental satellites, provides data and information services, and conducts related research.

The US Drought Monitor is a national publication prepared weekly as a collaboration between NOAA, the US Department of Agriculture, and the National Drought Mitigation Center (NDMC). It provides a synthesis of multiple indices and impacts that represent a consensus of federal and academic scientists. Heim is one of the regular authors. He says the Monitor is a bit more accurate, but given that it was started in 1999, it lacks the historical perspective of the Palmer Index. The Monitor reports that 21% of the continental US is in an exceptional drought.

Drivers of Drought
There are four compelling drivers of drought, says Heim: climate or the amount of sun we get; topography, i.e. the arrangement of continents and oceans; ocean temperatures; and, finally, the composition of the Earth’s atmosphere, which we are affecting with the release of carbon dioxide. According to Heim, humans are influencing the climate for the first time to a greater and greater extent.

Heim says global climate models are predicting that with overall temperatures increasing, the hydrological cycle is intensifying: Water demand should go up, but with warmth there is a greater capacity to hold water in the air, leading to more rain. We can expect more short interval droughts, more and heavier rains that cannot soak into the ground, and more floods that rivers cannot control.

Heim describes four kinds of drought: meteorological; hydrological in which the water table goes down; the agricultural drought when crops that need water at specific times don’t get it in dry land farming; and socioeconomic drought.

In socioeconomic droughts, people need water, factories need water for processing, power plants need water for cooling, and the demand keeps increasing. Pretty soon, there is not enough water to meet the demand. As the population continues to increase, Heim predicts this type of drought will become a real problem. It is beginning to impact the South. “People need to focus on being more efficient water managers and learn how to get more water into the system,” says Heim. “Drought needs to be an overall part of managing water more efficiently.”

“We’ve been around for thousands of years, but only in the last 300 years have we started affecting the global climate,” concludes Heim. “We need to be responsible players in the earth’s climate.”

What Is GIS?
In 1854, John Snow used points on a map of London to represent the locations of individual cases of cholera during the outbreak there, which led to the source of the disease—a contaminated water pump which Snow quickly dismantled. This was the first recorded use of cartographic methods to analyze clusters of geographically dependent phenomena.

The world’s first truly operational GIS was developed in 1962 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada by Dr. Roger Tomlinson of the federal Department of Forestry and Rural Development. Features of the Canada Geographic Information System were successfully incorporated in GIS software developed by the early 1980s by M&S Computing (later Intergraph), ESRI, and Computer Aided Resource Information System (CARIS). These developments combined the first-generation approach to separation of spatial and attribute information with a second-generation approach to organizing attribute data into database structures.

Meanwhile, two parallel public domain systems began development in the late 1970s.  MOSS, the Map Overlay and Statistical System project, started in 1977 in Fort Collins, CO, under the auspices of the Western Energy and Land Use Team and the US Fish and Wildlife Service. In 1982, the US Army Corps of Engineering Research Laboratory in Champaign, IL developed GIS for use by the US military.

Photo: Green World Solutions
A map type plot of bad design, with red meaning too little water, blue meaning too much water, and green meaning an average amount of water
Photo: Green World Solutions
A map type plot of good design, with green and blue, no red
Today, GIS has emerged as a software application technology that combines geospatial data with observed ground data, stores and edits it, shares and displays layers of geographic information, and generates reports and maps.

The Private Sector Innovates
Companies have sprung up or reoriented their business to create and market GIS data products to state and local agencies, municipalities, and private companies for all kinds of uses, such as scientific investigations, archaeology, environmental impact assessment, criminology, and geographic history. Water management, long-range planning, and weather tracking is high on the list.

ESRI, headquartered in Redlands, CA, is acknowledged by many to be the world leader in GIS technology. It was founded in 1969 as a consulting firm that specialized in land use analysis projects. By the 1980s, it was devoting its resources to developing a core set of application tools that could be applied in a computer environment to create a GIS technology.

Steve Kopp, program manager for geoprocessing and analysis at ESRI, says the company has over 90% market share in water resources. Its water community customers have a pretty broad base, spanning everything from federal agencies doing broad scale resource management to water districts, basin, and aqueduct managers, people who do water distribution, and civil engineers doing flood modeling. Furthermore, there has been a strong integration between ESRI’s software and the Army Corps of Engineers’ hydrologic modeling software as well as commercial water modeling software.

NOAA and the National Weather Service, as well as the national meteorological agencies of the United Kingdom and Australia use ESRI GIS software, in conjunction with numerical predication models, to understand the spatial and temporal distribution of precipitation, and, therefore, the potential for drought or floods. 

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For example, they might be interested in knowing how much rain would fall within a watershed over a period of time, given the shape of the channel, and the chance that flooding might occur and its extent, Kopp explains. The Federal Energy Management Administration has a project called HAZUS that uses flood and other hazard models set on top of ESRI software for natural disaster damage assessment.

GreenWorld Solutions, in Riverside, CA, was established two years ago to promote GIS technology. It created a product called “Green World Solutions GPS Audit Technology.” The company uses it to assist developers and water districts in complying with California law AB 1881, which went into effect January 1, 2009. This law updated the state’s “water efficient landscape ordinance” and requires 71% efficiency for landscape irrigation designs of areas 5,000 square feet or larger. Subsequent regulations have mandated high-efficiency requirements for landscape irrigation equipment including irrigation controllers, moisture sensors, emission devices, and valves. The new law also requires audits every five years. Next Page >

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