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Journal article

Scenario-based water resources planning for utilities in the Lake Victoria region

This article describes the development of water resources models for three East African towns to investigate climate, infrastructure and demographic scenarios.

David Purkey, Vishal Mehta / Published on 9 April 2013

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Citation

Mehta, V.K., O. Aslam, L. Dale, N. Miller, and D.R. Purkey (2013). Scenario-based water resources planning for utilities in the Lake Victoria region. Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Parts 61–62, 22–31 (online March 2013).

Urban areas in the Lake Victoria region are experiencing the highest growth rates in Africa. As efforts to meet increasing demand accelerate, integrated water resources management (IWRM) tools provide opportunities for utilities and other stakeholders to develop a planning framework comprehensive enough to include short-term (e.g. land-use change), as well as longer-term (e.g. climate change) scenarios.

This paper presents IWRM models built using the Water Evaluation And Planning (WEAP) decision support system, for three towns in the LV region – Bukoba (Tanzania), Masaka (Uganda), and Kisii (Kenya). Each model was calibrated under current system performance based on site visits, utility reporting and interviews. Projected water supply, demand, revenues and costs were then evaluated against a combination of climate, demographic and infrastructure scenarios up to 2050.

The results show that water supply in all three towns is currently infrastructure limited; achieving existing design capacity could meet most projected demand until 2020s in Masaka beyond which new supply and conservation strategies would be needed. In Bukoba, reducing leakages would provide little performance improvement in the short-term, but doubling capacity would meet all demands until 2050. In Kisii, major infrastructure investment is urgently needed. In Masaka, streamflow simulations show that wetland sources could satisfy all demand until 2050, but at the cost of almost no water downstream of the intake.

These models demonstrate the value of IWRM tools for developing water management plans that integrate hydroclimatology-driven supply to demand projections on a single platform.

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SEI authors

David Purkey

Centre Director

SEI Latin America

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