通过气候融资减轻野火对水质的影响:以普罗沃河流域为例。

IF 4.3 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES ACS ES&T water Pub Date : 2025-02-05 eCollection Date: 2025-02-14 DOI:10.1021/acsestwater.4c00727
Braxton W Porter, Robert B Sowby, Gustavious P Williams, Braden J Limb, Jason C Quinn, Alex Johnson, Evan A Thomas
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引用次数: 0

摘要

野火发生后,森林流域的河流水质容易退化,影响饮用水处理,并可能由于处理期间额外的电力消耗而导致碳排放增加。我们通过减少美国犹他州普罗沃河流域发生火灾后潜在的水处理能源需求,探索基于气候的融资支持野火缓解和流域恢复的潜力。我们使用GeoWEPP模拟了Provo河野火前后的侵蚀和水质。我们使用来自流域水处理厂的能源数据和文献数据来估计处理退化水的能源使用的增加。研究发现,大多数流域不受大的处理需求变化的影响,但少数热点地区容易出现泥沙负荷增加。在普罗沃河流域,平均而言,在一个12位水文单位代码(HUC)子流域发生火灾,由于水处理厂所需的能源增加,在野火事件发生后的一年内,对应于350公吨二氧化碳当量(CO2e)的额外排放。如果减少野火风险,避免的排放可以为贡献hu8子流域每年带来88,500美元的碳信用收入(按每二氧化碳当量10美元计算)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Mitigating Wildfire Impact on Water Quality through Climate-Based Financing: A Case Study of the Provo River Watershed.

Following wildfires, riverine water quality in forested watersheds is prone to degradation, impacting drinking water treatment and potentially causing increased carbon emissions because of additional electricity consumption during treatment. We explore the potential for climate-based financing to support wildfire mitigation and watershed restoration by reducing potential water treatment energy demand following a fire within the Provo River watershed, Utah, USA. We model pre- and post-wildfire erosion and water quality in the Provo River using GeoWEPP. We use energy data from a water treatment plant in the watershed and literature data to estimate the increase in energy use for treating degraded water. We find that most watershed areas are not subject to large treatment demand changes, but a few hotspots are prone to increased sediment loads. In the Provo River watershed, on average, a fire in a single 12-digit hydrologic unit code (HUC) subwatershed corresponds to an additional 350 metric tonnes of carbon-dioxide-equivalent (CO2e) emissions for one year following a wildfire event due to increased energy required by the water treatment plant. If wildfire risk is reduced, the avoided emissions can generate a potential of $88,500 annually in carbon credit revenue (at $10/CO2e credit) for the contributing HUC8 sub-basin.

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