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Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September 2015

Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

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Page 1: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins

Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo.National Practice Leader, Environmental ScienceSeptember 2015

Page 2: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September
Page 3: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Okanagan location

From Natural Resources Canada

(2008)

Page 4: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September
Page 5: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Phase 2 Study Components

Water Supply Water Demand

Page 6: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Basin-wide water balance

Page 7: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Okanagan Lake water balanceHalf the net inflow evaporates

Page 8: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September
Page 9: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Okanagan Basin Hydrology Modelan Integrated Hydrological Modelling System that covers all land-based phases of the hydrologic cycle

Page 10: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September
Page 11: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Okanagan Water Demand Model:Cadastre, Soil, Climate and Land Use Polygons

1. Microsprinkler on peaches

2. Microsprinkler on cherries

3. Microsprinkler on pears

4. Drip on pears

5. Residential

6. Bee hives

1

2

3

4

5 6

Cadastre

Polygon

Page 12: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Water Use

Page 13: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Phase 2 Recommendations

More monitoringMore researchMore scenariosWork to make the Phase 2 models more accessible

Page 14: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September
Page 15: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

This is the “Blank+Dots Blue” layout.

Use it for impact text, callout quotes,

and photos with defined borders,

or as a bold contrast from apredominantly white slide deck.

Page 16: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Historical Average of projections of 10 GCMs 

Expected Streamflow in 2080 -Okanagan River at Oliver

Recreated from Hamlet et al. (2010)

Winter runoff increase

Spring runoff decrease

2080

sS

trea

mfl

ow

(d

am3)

 

50000

70000

90000

110000

130000

150000

170000

190000

210000

230000

250000

oct nov dec jan feb mar apr may jun jul aug sep

Lower summer flows (with longer

duration)

Projected monthly streamflow in 2080

Page 17: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 20350

50

100

150

200

250

300

Year

Po

pu

lati

on

(th

ou

san

ds)

Growth projections - Central Okanagan36% increase 2012 to 2035

Source: BC Stats 2012

Page 18: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Historic and Predicted Annual Evaporation from Okanagan Lake

Page 19: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Infill

Build-out with

landscaping

Future Okanagan Basin Outdoor Domestic Water Use

Page 20: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Projected annual water use 2011-2040

(entire Okanagan) under 6 scenarios: 2011 - 2040

Page 21: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September
Page 22: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Hydrologic Connectivity Model (2012)

Page 23: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September
Page 24: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

OWAT – Okanagan Water Allocation Tool

ORGANIZATIONAL CHART – OWAT PLAN CONCEPTUAL PROJECT TIMELINE Establish Instream Flow Needs Develop MFLNRO Licence Evaluation Criteria Groundwater – Surface Water Linkages Assessment Develop Water Licence/Demand/Use Database OCHM Modification – New WEAP-Based Model State of the Basin Assessment Supply and Demand Uncertainty Analysis Groundwater Aquifer System Characterization Development of the OWAT Develop OWAT User Interface

Page 25: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September
Page 26: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September
Page 27: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September
Page 28: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September
Page 29: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Flow of Similkameen River at Princeton

Similkameen River at Princeton (WSC 08NL007)

Page 30: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September
Page 31: Water Supply and Demand in the Okanagan and Similkameen River Basins Brian Guy, Ph.D., P.Geo. National Practice Leader, Environmental Science September

Current Supply and Demand IssuesMonitoring networks

Environmental Flow NeedsGroundwaterFlooding (floodplains, stormwater systems)DroughtSource ProtectionWater storageInvasive musselsFN/provincial water management