Abstract:
Droughts can have significant and varied impacts in urban areas. Such impacts range
from the direct costs of water interruptions on businesses, the intangible costs of water
restrictions on households, to the environmental costs of increased water abstraction. It
is therefore challenging to assess the full range of costs of a drought.
This research presents a practical framework to assist urban water suppliers with this
challenge. The framework supports suppliers to identify relevant drought impacts,
apply suitable methods to quantify the costs of these impacts, and then integrate such
costs into their long-term water supply planning. A supplier can use these results not
only to inform the optimal level of service for its supply network but also to inform
decision-making during a drought.
This study addresses some gaps in current research by focussing on drought costs in
urban areas rather than agricultural areas, considering methods for estimating drought
costs from both economics literature and water industry studies, and by providing
practical guidance on how resulting drought costs can be integrated within water supply
planning.
This paper applies the framework to Wellington Water, a New Zealand water supplier.
Under the framework, Wellington Water’s current 2%/1 in 50-year annual shortfall
probability level of service sits within the range of optimal level of service results, albeit
with some limitations and assumptions that need refining. This initial outcome was
surprising in light of recent studies into the cost of drought in the United Kingdom that
have recommended significant improvement in levels of service.
The case study illustrates the difficult choice a supplier may face during a severe
drought between cutting off water to some customers or taking water beyond
environmental limits, with potentially high environmental costs. The results indicate
that, in this case, taking water beyond environmental limits likely has lower economic
costs than cutting off water. However, the research identifies several challenges and
uncertainties in linking river abstraction with environmental costs.
This paper identifies areas of further research to improve understanding of the drought
impacts and community preferences to aid suppliers to make more well-informed
decisions in this complex but increasingly important area of network planning.