Advancing a Net Zero Urban Water Future in the US Southwest: Alternative Water Sources and Retrofits
Researchers and practitioners from Albuquerque, Denver, Los Angeles, and Tucson convened virtually in November 2023 to discuss the development of NZUW model and integration of alternative water sources. The workshop was held in two sessions spanning two days, November 6th and November 17th, 2023. The first session aimed to identify the key questions that the NZUW model seeks to address and to prioritize scenarios for further investigation. It also focused on the challenges, adaptive solutions, and modeling needs for the 3 systems (natural, built and social) to be incorporated into the model. The second session delved into modeling methods used by previous studies to model urban water systems that integrate alternative water sources, to achieve objectives such as climate robustness, cost efficiency, and supply reliability (Porse et al., 2017; Newman et al., 2014; Bichai et al., 2015; Xu et al., 2020). This brief first outlines the common scenarios across the four case study cities that need to be modeled to achieve net zero water targets. It then details the challenges, adaptive solutions, and modeling needs within the natural, built, and social systems to be incorporated for model development (See Table 1). It further discusses the unique perspectives of each city and how their situations diverge from the collective findings. Finally, we present a summary of modeling approaches used by sample past studies for modeling urban water systems with alternative water sources, to offer insights for NZUW model development (See Table 2).
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