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Open Water Use Forum Webinar Overview of 2015 Compilation Molly Maupin Idaho Water Science Center National Water Use Science Team Lead February 10, 2016
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Outline Introduction Water Use Concepts 2015 Compilation Data Elements/Categories Documentation Compilation Process Timelines Categories (Pop/PS/DO)
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Water Use Mission: The USGS National Water-Use Information program compiles and disseminates estimates of the Nation's water use on a 5-year annual cycle. Goals: Analyze the source, use, and disposition of water at different scales Document trends in water use in the United States Cooperate with state and local agencies on projects Develop water-use data bases Publish local, state, and national water-use data reports Reply to water-use information requests from the public
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Water Use Concepts Interaction of man and the hydrologic cycle Water that is used for certain purposes
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Water-Use Concepts SourceDispositionUse
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Water Use Concepts Source Offstream Withdrawal: Water removed from a ground-water source or diverted from a surface-water source Instream Water is used in stream channel (hydroelectric)/navigation)
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Water Use Concepts Source – Reclaimed Wastewater Wastewater treatment plant effluent that has been diverted for beneficial use before it reaches a natural waterway or aquifer
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Water Use Concepts Categories of Use Domestic Industrial Thermoelectric Power Irrigation Livestock Aquaculture Mining
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Water Use Concepts Public Supply Public suppliers withdraws, treat, and distribute water Deliveries to end users Domestic (since 2000)
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Water Use Concepts Disposition Consumptive Use Return Flow Conveyance Loss
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Water Use Concepts Consumptive use That part of water withdrawn that: evaporates, transpires, is incorporated into products or crops, is consumed by humans or livestock, or is otherwise removed from the immediate water environment
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Water Use Concepts Return flow Quantity of water discharged after use to surface or ground water so it becomes available for use
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Water Use Concepts Conveyance Loss Water that is lost in transit from a pipe, canal, conduit, or ditch by leakage or evaporation
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Water Use Concepts Databases Tune in 2/24/16 for webinar on our databases Site-Specific Data (Geographically tracks water use) Aggregated Data (Summarizes Water Use annually)
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Water Use Concepts Aggregate Data Total annual average daily withdrawal Area (County, HUC, Aquifer) Water sources Surface water, fresh and saline Groundwater, fresh and saline Categories of use
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2015 Compilation Water Data Withdrawals and deliveries Consumptive use Ancillary data (people/power/acres) Total population (provided) Population served by Public Supply Power production Irrigated acres
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2015 Compilation Mandatory Categories Water Science Center: Public Supply Domestic Industrial Irrigation (Total) National Program Provides: Thermoelectric Power Mining Livestock Aquaculture Must compile for all counties
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2015 Compilation Mandatory Data Elements Freshwater withdrawals Saline withdrawals (where appropriate) Deliveries to Domestic Reclaimed wastewater (nulls allowed) Total Population Population Served Acres Irrigated by type Power Generated Consumptive Use Irrigation Thermoelectric Power
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2015 Compilation Optional Categories Can compile for any area (HUC8/County/Aquifer) Self-supplied Commercial Hydroelectric Power Public-supply deliveries to Commercial, Industrial, Thermoelectric Wastewater Treatment Returns Reservoir Evaporation Irrigation (Crop/Golf course split)—but Total irrigation is mandatory
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2015 – County
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2015 – HUC
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2015 – Aquifer
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Documentation Required when data are submitted to review Provides explanation of what was done, how, why, changes in data from 2010 Leave tracks for the next compilation Word document template One document per State
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Documentation Sources – contact information Methods Quality-control checks Assumptions and reasons Coefficients How missing data were estimated References
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Documentation Where and how data are stored Original files -- basic data files Working files -- spreadsheets Final data sets Aggregated files -- AWUDS Locations of electronic and paper files
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Compilation Process Identify data sources Compile the data Document process and results Data review In-house Regional National
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Compilation Process In-House Data Review Review aggregated data Check for errors Ranking Comparisons with previous years’ data When In-House review is complete, transfer data in AWUDS to “In-Review”
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Compilation Process Regional Data Review Check for completeness of data Review documentation for explanations of changes from 2010 Comparison between States within the Region Comparison with previous years’ data
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Compilation Process National Data Review Comparison among States Comparison with previous years’ data Not final until regional review of documentation and national review of data are completed.
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Timelines March, 2017 - all categories except Thermoelectric Power October, 2017 – Thermoelectric Power Potential: dataset releases for nationally completed categories
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Resources Regional Water-Use Specialists Northeast – Cheryl Dieter, cadieter@usgs.gov cadieter@usgs.gov Southeast – Melissa Harris, mharris@usgs.gov mharris@usgs.gov Central – Tammy Ivahnenko, ivahnenk@usgs.gov ivahnenk@usgs.gov West – Rod Caldwell, caldwell@usgs.gov caldwell@usgs.gov Databases Nancy Barber, nlbarber@usgs.gov Livestock, Mining, Aquaculture John Lovelace, jlovelac@usgs.gov
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Compilation Guidelines We are working to post electronic compilation of historical and current (2015) guidelines. Guidelines for preparation of State water-use estimates Covers mandatory categories Definitions Data sources Compilation techniques http://pubs.usgs.gov/tm/2007/tm4e1/
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Population, Public Supply, and Domestic Water Use Categories
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Public Supply Examples: Cities, water districts, mobile home parks, nursing homes, Indian reservations, military bases Withdraw and/or purchase water Examples that are NOT counted in the Public Supply category: Campgrounds, hospitals, schools,
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Inventory of Public Suppliers Names of water suppliers Sources of water – GW and SW Purchases between Public Suppliers Population served Location of population served
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Public Use and Losses Public use is water that is used for public services such as public swimming pools, parks, firefighting and public buildings. Losses are unaccounted for water, such as leakage from distribution pipes. Not a data element, but calculated in database.
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Total Public Supply Withdrawals Domestic Self- Supplied Withdrawals Public supply deliveries Public use and losses Total Population Commercial Domestic Thermoelectric Industrial Population served by Public Supply Self-supplied population Total Domestic Withdrawals
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Domestic water use Household uses, indoor and outdoor Domestic deliveries water provided by public supply. Source identified with PWS. Included with PWS total withdrawal. Self-supplied domestic withdrawals Self- supplied from wells, springs, rainwater, hauled …. Total Domestic= Deliveries + Self-supplied
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Midville Distribution System Well #1 Diversion Well #2 Northton Distribution System Great Miami River Public-Supply System Example #1 Easy County
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Midville Distribution System Well #1 Diversion Well #2 Northton Distribution System Great Miami River Public-Supply System Example #2 Easy County Complicated County
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Example Survey Survey sent by and returned to State agency ! System withdrawals System deliveries Population Residences Connections Estimates
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Helpful information to get Sales to single-family and multi-family dwellings – units! Numbers of service connections Deliveries to other uses, esp. large users Public uses Losses – unaccounted for water Population characteristics
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Domestic self-supplied Source of water Self-supplied population x gpcd coefficient Relation to population served 2010 National coefficients ~ 50-170 gpcd Coefficients based on delivery data; usually larger
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Selecting domestic coefficients Self-supplied = public supplied Self-supplied < public supplied Self-supplied > public supplied Significance of self-supplied population
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QA/QC – Domestic Deliveries Population served < County population Change in population served since 2010 Total gpcd – reasonable or not Domestic deliveries as % of total
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Question
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