Civil Engineering / İnşaat Mühendisliği

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/13

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  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 2
    Citation - Scopus: 2
    Assessment of Future Water Demand in a Semiarid Region of Turkey: a Case Study of Tahtali–seferihisar Basin
    (Springer, 2023) Karahan, S. M.; Elçi, Şebnem
    Water is a vital resource for society and nature, and its scarcity has consequences in all aspects of existence. Today, issues including the inability to preserve the status of existing water resources and excessive water withdrawal are causing the amount of water to diminish day by day. Furthermore, factors such as urbanization and industrialization, population growth, water quality degradation owing to agricultural pesticides, and climate change, all have a negative impact on water supplies. A basin-based water management analysis was carried out in this study by applying the "Integrated Water Resources Management" strategy to the Tahtalı–Seferihisar sub-basin in Turkey, where water stress is expected in the future. Using the WEAP (Water Evaluation and Planning System) model, the hydrological (precipitation, flow, evaporation) data of important water resources for the basin and Izmir (Tahtalı, Seferihisar, Ürkmez, and Kavakdere Dams) were used to predict the availability of water resources in the future, and several possible scenarios for water demands/supplies were analyzed. The water budget balances projected in 2050 have been calculated by considering six different scenarios: Reference Scenario, Report Consumption Scenario, Optimistic Case Scenario, Pessimistic Case Scenario, Return Flow Scenario, and Various Forecast Scenario. The water balances that can be obtained in each scenario under various situations were computed and compared. For all considered scenarios, unmet water demand in the basin is found to be significant (157.52 hm3 in the Optimistic Case Scenario and 373.16 hm3 in the Pessimistic Case Scenario).
  • Book
    Citation - Scopus: 6
    Climate Change and Its Effects on Water Resources: Issues of National and Global Security
    (Springer, 2011) Baba, Alper; Gündüz, Orhan; Friedel, Michael J.; Tayfur, Gökmen; Howard, Ken W.F.; Chambel, Antonio
    National and global security can be assessed in many ways but one underlying factor for all humanity is to access to reliable sources of water for drinking, sanitation, food production and manufacturing industry. In many parts of the world, population growth and an escalating demand for water already threaten the sustainable management of available water supplies. Global warming, climate change and sea level rise are expected to intensify the resource sustainability issue in many water-stressed regions of the world by reducing the annual supply of renewable fresh water and promoting the intrusion of saline water into aquifers along sea coasts where 50% of the global population reside. Pro-active resource management decisions are required, but such efforts would be futile unless reliable predictions can be made to assess the impact of the changing global conditions that would impart upon the water cycle and the quality and availability of critical water reserves.