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A unique feature of this book is that it deals with sustainable management of river sediments by explicitly incorporating sediment management in the planning, design and operation of dams, both to extend reservoir life and to minimize downstream impacts of sediment starvation. This book takes a river system perspective first, explaining how dams (and other anthropic actions such as aggregate mining) disrupt continuity of sediment transport, the consequences of that disruption, and opportunities to sustainably manage sediments, especially by passing sediments through or around dams. The book also addresses the likely consequences of climate change on reservoir operation and sediment supply and transport.
It is not the first book about reservoir sediment management, nor the most comprehensive. Rather, it has more emphasis on geomorphic and ecological processes in the larger fluvial system, emphasizes the fact that sustainable sediment management techniques could be applied much more widely than they are now, and it offers guidance as to when different techniques are applicable. It also explicitly critiques the conventional economics used in dam planning, and proposes alternative formulations that explicitly account for intergenerational equity as it relates to natural river systems and infrastructure (Annandale 2013).
What the Book Covers
The book begins with an overview of river basin processes, including sediment transport, and effects of changed sediment supply (chapters 1-3). Chapter 4 covers upstream sediment management approaches such as check dams and soil conservation. Chapters 5-7 summarize sustainable sediment management in (and around/through) reservoirs. Chapter 8 explores sediment management in dam removals, usually the biggest issue in such projects. Chapter 9 provides a long-term perspective and explores the economics of managing reservoir capacity. Chapter 10 presents a set of case studies that compellingly illustrate the issues involved and opportunities to enhance sustainability, and Chapter 11 presents policy recommendations.
The book will include simple, effective diagrams explaining fluvial geomorphic processes, human alterations, and sustainable sediment management techniques. Two examples are presented here. Figure 1, first published in Kondolf (1994), shows the zones of erosion, transport, and deposition of the ideal fluvial system as described by Schumm (1977), but with the addition of the analogy of a conveyor belt to emphasize that, viewed in geologic time, sediment is inevitably moving downstream through the zone of transport, and disruptions to this movement will have consequences. This figure has been reproduced and modified in subsequent publications by numerous authors. Figure 2, first published in Kondolf and Piegay (2010), depicts a fluvial system debouching on the coast and the effect of various anthropic actions on sediment production, transport, and deposition, and consequences for channel and coastal landforms.
Contents 1. Introduction (10pp) - continuity of fluxes through rivers: water, sediment, nutrients, biota - role of sediment in river systems - reservoirs and sustainable water supply and hydropower - influence of climate change
Rivers, basins, and sediment processes (25pp) - Basin, idealized zones of erosion, transport, & deposition - coarse vs fine sediments - bedload vs suspended, bed material load vs washload - channel form and process, vegetation - sediment supply to coasts & deltas - role of sediments in fluvial ecology
Changes in Sediment Supply (25pp) - mapping of sediment yield - effects of land use change (eg road construction, depopulation of rural areas) - effects of dams, “transparent’ vs "black hole’ reservoirs
effects of sand and gravel mining - anticipated effects of climate change
Reservoir Sedimentation Management (40pp)
Upstream sediment supply management approaches - Routing
Sediment Removal
Efficiency of management strategies
Sediment management and environmental consequences downstream of dams (40pp) - impact of dams on sediment budgets for rivers downstream of dams - ecological considerations related to sediment downstream of the dam.
Managing sediment through multiple reservoirs (10pp) - sediment management for dams in series - sediment management for dams in parallel - the concept of dam cascades as a strategy to minimize overall impacts
Sediment management during dam removal (15pp) - principles, techniques - case study: Elwha and Glines Canyon Dams, Elwha River
case study: San Clemente Dam, Carmel River
Planning and managing reservoirs for sustainability (15pp) - intergenerational equity
balancing development (social) and environmental needs
reservoir storage - a renewable or exhaustible resource? - economics of exhaustible resources
dam siting - anticipating future sediment management in dam design - anticipating climate change - monitoring and evaluating effectiveness of sediment management
Case studies (30pp)
5-6 to be selected from those listed below and others, for geographic and topical diversity - Mekong River -cumulative sediment trapping, delta impacts - Prado Dam, Santa Ana River - removing sediment from reservoir and introducing it downstream
Tarbela Dam - poor design and planning, effects on downstream river and infrastructure, sediment removal order of magnitude more expensive than original cost to build dam
Nile River - projected cumulative sediment trapping, transboundary impacts - Mississippi River - sediment starvation in delta - San Gabriel River - sediment routing, political constraints in urban area - Dahan River - sabo dams, Barlin dam failure, density current venting through Shihman Reservoir
Rhone River - ecological flushing
Kurobe River - coordinated flushing - Asahi River - bypassing
Policy Recommendations (20pp) - all dam proposals/plans should address sedimentation - plan over sufficiently large temporal & spatial scales (addressing transboundary issues) - adopt a life-cycle approach to design/management of reservoirs - dams are not the only factor:
manage construction aggregate supply and demand on regional scale
consider channel-floodplain sediment exchange (eg, overbank sedimentation processes)
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A unique feature of this book is that it deals with sustainable management of river sediments by explicitly incorporating sediment management in the planning, design and operation of dams, both to extend reservoir life and to minimize downstream impacts of sediment starvation. This book takes a river system perspective first, explaining how dams (and other anthropic actions such as aggregate mining) disrupt continuity of sediment transport, the consequences of that disruption, and opportunities to sustainably manage sediments, especially by passing sediments through or around dams. The book also addresses the likely consequences of climate change on reservoir operation and sediment supply and transport.
It is not the first book about reservoir sediment management, nor the most comprehensive. Rather, it has more emphasis on geomorphic and ecological processes in the larger fluvial system, emphasizes the fact that sustainable sediment management techniques could be applied much more widely than they are now, and it offers guidance as to when different techniques are applicable. It also explicitly critiques the conventional economics used in dam planning, and proposes alternative formulations that explicitly account for intergenerational equity as it relates to natural river systems and infrastructure (Annandale 2013).
What the Book Covers
The book begins with an overview of river basin processes, including sediment transport, and effects of changed sediment supply (chapters 1-3). Chapter 4 covers upstream sediment management approaches such as check dams and soil conservation. Chapters 5-7 summarize sustainable sediment management in (and around/through) reservoirs. Chapter 8 explores sediment management in dam removals, usually the biggest issue in such projects. Chapter 9 provides a long-term perspective and explores the economics of managing reservoir capacity. Chapter 10 presents a set of case studies that compellingly illustrate the issues involved and opportunities to enhance sustainability, and Chapter 11 presents policy recommendations.
The book will include simple, effective diagrams explaining fluvial geomorphic processes, human alterations, and sustainable sediment management techniques. Two examples are presented here. Figure 1, first published in Kondolf (1994), shows the zones of erosion, transport, and deposition of the ideal fluvial system as described by Schumm (1977), but with the addition of the analogy of a conveyor belt to emphasize that, viewed in geologic time, sediment is inevitably moving downstream through the zone of transport, and disruptions to this movement will have consequences. This figure has been reproduced and modified in subsequent publications by numerous authors. Figure 2, first published in Kondolf and Piegay (2010), depicts a fluvial system debouching on the coast and the effect of various anthropic actions on sediment production, transport, and deposition, and consequences for channel and coastal landforms.
Contents 1. Introduction (10pp) - continuity of fluxes through rivers: water, sediment, nutrients, biota - role of sediment in river systems - reservoirs and sustainable water supply and hydropower - influence of climate change
Rivers, basins, and sediment processes (25pp) - Basin, idealized zones of erosion, transport, & deposition - coarse vs fine sediments - bedload vs suspended, bed material load vs washload - channel form and process, vegetation - sediment supply to coasts & deltas - role of sediments in fluvial ecology
Changes in Sediment Supply (25pp) - mapping of sediment yield - effects of land use change (eg road construction, depopulation of rural areas) - effects of dams, “transparent’ vs "black hole’ reservoirs
effects of sand and gravel mining - anticipated effects of climate change
Reservoir Sedimentation Management (40pp)
Upstream sediment supply management approaches - Routing
Sediment Removal
Efficiency of management strategies
Sediment management and environmental consequences downstream of dams (40pp) - impact of dams on sediment budgets for rivers downstream of dams - ecological considerations related to sediment downstream of the dam.
Managing sediment through multiple reservoirs (10pp) - sediment management for dams in series - sediment management for dams in parallel - the concept of dam cascades as a strategy to minimize overall impacts
Sediment management during dam removal (15pp) - principles, techniques - case study: Elwha and Glines Canyon Dams, Elwha River
case study: San Clemente Dam, Carmel River
Planning and managing reservoirs for sustainability (15pp) - intergenerational equity
balancing development (social) and environmental needs
reservoir storage - a renewable or exhaustible resource? - economics of exhaustible resources
dam siting - anticipating future sediment management in dam design - anticipating climate change - monitoring and evaluating effectiveness of sediment management
Case studies (30pp)
5-6 to be selected from those listed below and others, for geographic and topical diversity - Mekong River -cumulative sediment trapping, delta impacts - Prado Dam, Santa Ana River - removing sediment from reservoir and introducing it downstream
Tarbela Dam - poor design and planning, effects on downstream river and infrastructure, sediment removal order of magnitude more expensive than original cost to build dam
Nile River - projected cumulative sediment trapping, transboundary impacts - Mississippi River - sediment starvation in delta - San Gabriel River - sediment routing, political constraints in urban area - Dahan River - sabo dams, Barlin dam failure, density current venting through Shihman Reservoir
Rhone River - ecological flushing
Kurobe River - coordinated flushing - Asahi River - bypassing
Policy Recommendations (20pp) - all dam proposals/plans should address sedimentation - plan over sufficiently large temporal & spatial scales (addressing transboundary issues) - adopt a life-cycle approach to design/management of reservoirs - dams are not the only factor:
manage construction aggregate supply and demand on regional scale
consider channel-floodplain sediment exchange (eg, overbank sedimentation processes)