Vulnerability of Major Wastewater Facilities to Flooding from Sea-Level Rise

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Vulnerability of Major Wastewater Vulnerability of Major Wastewater Facilities to Flooding from Sea- Facilities to Flooding from Sea- Level Rise Level Rise August 21, 2008 Shaun O’Neil King County WTD

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Vulnerability of Major Wastewater Facilities to Flooding from Sea-Level Rise. August 21, 2008 Shaun O’Neil King County WTD. King County wastewater treatment service area King County boundary. King County. King County. SNOHOMISH. SNOHOMISH. Sewerage. Sewerage. Service Area. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Vulnerability of Major Wastewater Facilities to Flooding from Sea-Level Rise

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Vulnerability of Major Wastewater Facilities Vulnerability of Major Wastewater Facilities to Flooding from Sea-Level Riseto Flooding from Sea-Level Rise

August 21, 2008Shaun O’Neil

King County WTD

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King County Wastewater System

• Serve 1.4 M people – 2.4 M by 2030

• 420 sq.mi.• 42 pump stations• 19 regulator

stations• 353 miles of pipe• 2” – 14’ in diameter• 200 mgd average

treatment• 34 Local agencies

contribute flow

a

PIERCE

SNOHOMISH

SKAGIT

WHATCOMOKANOGAN

CHELAN

KITTITAS

YAKIMA

KLICKITAT

BENTON

GRANT

DOUGLAS

FERRY

STEVENS

PENDORVILLE

SPOKANELINCOLN

ADAMS

WHITMAN

ASOTINWALLAWALLA

SKAMANIA

CLARK

FRANKLIN

COWLITZPACIFIC

LEWIS

THURSTON

GRAY'SHARBOR

MASON

JEFFERSONKITSAP

ISLAND

SAN JUAN

KING

GARFIELD

CLALLAM

COLUMBIA

Puget Sound

South Secondary plant

CSO PlantTreatment plant

CSOTreatment plant

West Secondary plant

King County wastewater treatment service area

King County boundary

NewSecondary plant (2010)

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• Scope and Assumptions

• Facility Elevations

• Current Tide levels

• Future Tide Levels

• Storm Impacts

• Results

Cal State LA

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USGS

University of Washington

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Seattle Tide Gauge Data (January 1983–December 2001)

Elevation (above NAVD88 zero feet)

Highest observed water level (January 27,1983) 12.14

Mean higher high water (MHHW) 9.01

Mean high water (MHW) 8.15

Mean sea level (MSL) 4.29

NAVD 0.00

Mean lower low water (MLLW) -2.35

Lowest observed water level (January 4, 1916) -7.38

NOAA

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NOAA

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Mean Sea Level Difference:for Seattle, WA

1983-2001 1960-1978 Difference:14.58 ft. 14.40 ft. 0.18 ft.

NOAA

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IPCC, 2007

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IPCC, 2007

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Puget Sound Sea-Level Rise Scenarios (Mote et al., 2008)

Scenario Predicted Sea-Level Rise

2050 2100

Very low sea-level rise—low-probability low-impact

3 inches (0.25 feet)

6 inches (0.50 feet)

Medium sea-level rise (most likely) 6 inches (0.50 feet)

13 inches (1.08 feet)

Very high sea-level rise—low-probability high-impact

22 inches (1.83 feet)

50 inches (4.17 feet)

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NASANASA

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Zervas, C.E., 2007

Feet

ab

ove N

AV

D 8

8 0

Seattle Storm Events Above Current Tide Levels

1% Storm10% Storm50% Storm

99% Storm

MHHW

MSL

NAVD88 0'-2

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14Feet

Ab

ove N

AV

D 8

8 0

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Annual Probability of Exceedance

Feet above Unaffected Tide

1% (once in 100 years average) 3.19’

10% (once in 10 years average) 2.79’

50% (once every 2 years average) 2.27’

99% (once per year average) 1.48’

Zervas, C.E., 2007

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Next Steps

• Terrain analysis of five lowest sites and West Point Treatment Plant.

• Create tool to replicate Vulnerability Analysis for other agencies.

• Conduct analysis of impact of sea-level rise on system hydraulics.

• Include sea-level rise as a planning factor for future projects.

• Review sea-level rise literature every five years and coordinate with CSI Updates.

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References

• Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). 2007. Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Solomon, S., Qin, D., Manning, M., Chen, Z.,. Marquis, M., Averyt, K.B., Tignor, M. and Miller, H.L. (Eds.). Cambridge, UK, and New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.

• Mote, P., Petersen A., Reeder, S., Shipman, H., and Whitely Binder, L. 2008. Sea Level Rise in the Coastal Waters of Washington State. Report prepared by the Climate Impacts Group, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, and the Washington Department of Ecology, Lacey, Washington.

• Zervas, C.E. 2005. Response of Extreme Storm Tide Levels to Long-Term Sea Level Change. Oceans, 2005, Proceedings of MTS/IEEE, 3, 2501-2506.

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Questions?

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Websites

• King County Climate Change with Vulnerable Facilities Analysis Paper - http://dnr.metrokc.gov/dnrp/climate-change/conference-2005.htm

• UW Climate Impacts Group - http://cses.washington.edu/cig/

• Mote Paper - http://cses.washington.edu/db/pdf/moteetalslr579.pdf

• Puget Sound LIDAR Consortium - http://pugetsoundlidar.ess.washington.edu/About_PSLC.htm

• NOAA Tides and Currents - http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/index.shtml

• Seattle Tide Gauge - http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/station_info.shtml?stn=9447130+SEATTLE,+PUGET+SOUND,+WA

• IPCC - http://www.ipcc.ch/ Shaun O’Neil206.684.1671

Shaun.O’[email protected]