At the end of 2022, 65 percent of the Western United States was in severe drought, the result of a two decades long mega drought in the Colorado River Basin that had captured headlines around the world.
However, it was flooding, not
drought, that was making headlines when we began our research for this story
about OpenET, a revolutionary new online platform geared towards
helping farmers and water managers monitor and reduce water use in watersheds
where supplies were not keeping up with demand.
The start of 2023 brought flooding
to many counties in California, leaving 68 percent of the state with suddenly
little to no drought. And caused Forrest Melton, the NASA Project Scientist for
OpenET and Associate Program Manager for agriculture and water resources with
the NASA Earth Action program, to pause our video interview after a tree fell
down outside his Bay Area home on a rainy day in March, 2023.
Coming online again after calling
the fire department, Melton didn’t seem all too optimistic that the wet
conditions would last. “California tends to swing between the two extremes of
drought and flood,” Melton said. He referenced the 2016/17 winter which had particularly high precipitation but was followed by dry
conditions during the following years, before the relief brought by the heavy
rains, and flooding, in early 2023.
According to NOAA’s National Integrated Drought Information System it will take more than one wet winter to
replenish groundwater in many parts of the western United States. Groundwater
levels across the California Central Valley and many parts of the Ogallala
Aquifer continue to decline. The need for better water management remains
essential, and yet the data necessary to support new approaches has not been
broadly available.
Enter the OpenET project, a
multi-disciplinary, collaborative effort to make satellite-based
evapotranspiration (ET) data available to the public. Melton describes the
project as providing invaluable and scientifically robust data at all scales,
“that can be used to support day to day decision making and long range planning
to try to solve some really long standing and important water management
challenges in the West.”
What is Evapotranspiration?
Evapotranspiration is the combined
process of evaporation and transpiration, both of which transfer water from the
land surface to the atmosphere as water vapor. Evaporation transforms water
from the surface of the ground or bodies of water into water vapor, while
transpiration is water vapor that is evaporated from plant tissues and escapes
through the stomata, the tiny pores in plant leaves and stems. It is a process
that is happening all around us almost all the time, but because water vapor is
invisible to the human eye, it is very hard to measure on the ground.
A conceptual diagram of near-surface hydrology. M. W. Toews
To understand the effect
evapotranspiration has on a local water cycle, picture a large decorative
fountain. Typically, these fountains recycle the same water over and over. As a
fountain runs, water is pumped out of the fountain heads, falls back into the
fountain’s basin, and then flows back through the pipe system before starting
the process all over again. We can think of the water remaining within this
fountain’s local water system as non-consumptive water use.
Some water, however, will be lost from the fountain’s local water system by
evaporating from the pool’s surface or mist from the fountain’s spray.
Imagine the fountain also has lily
pads growing in its basin. The lily pads will use the fountain’s water to
survive and grow, losing some of that water to transpiration. The total water
lost is evapotranspiration, and is considered consumptive water
use, because it cannot be reused by the fountain. Tracking evapotranspiration
can tell you how much water is removed or “depleted” from a local water system,
and how much water needs to be added back in to support plant growth and
maintain a healthy balance between water supply and water use. If too much
water leaves the fountain, it will stop running. If too much water is added, it will
overflow.
These concepts can be applied more
broadly to the hydrologic cycle as a whole, and evapotranspiration data
can play an important part in designing and implementing sustainable water
management practices to combat larger issues like drought, as well as both
short and long-term reductions in water availability. Historically, ET data
have been obtained from ground-based instruments and methods, such as weighing
lysimeters, which weigh soil and plants to track the water volume lost by
evaporation or transpiration. Another common method is called eddy covariance,
which calculates the amount of water vapor transported away from the land
surface by wind eddies as they move across the land surface. But both are
expensive and difficult to install and maintain, and measurements are only
representative of a small portion of an individual agricultural field. It is
cost prohibitive to collect these measurements over larger areas.
What makes OpenET different?
The OpenET team saw the important
niche left open by traditional evapotranspiration measurement methods and
filled it. They built upon decades of research funded by NASA, USDA and USGS
and developed a new platform that can take easily accessible and already
available data from satellite programs, like Landsat, and combine it with
weather data to calculate the ET for every quarter acre of land. Satellites can
record information like the Earth’s surface temperature and how much of the
incoming light from the sun is being reflected back out to space. OpenET is
able to use physically-based mathematical models to combine the satellite and
weather data and output accurate data on evapotranspiration rates and
volumes.
This information is then made
easily accessible through OpenET’s Data Explorer, a free web-based tool that
allows anyone with an internet connection to access the data OpenET provides.
Users begin by selecting an area of interest from a map of the western United
States that provides data at the satellite resolution of a quarter-acre, and
also broken down into known areas of interest and individual agricultural
fields, each color coded with a heat map of evapotranspiration. Cooler colors
indicate higher rates of evapotranspiration while warmer colors indicate lower
rates. Users can zoom into specific areas on the map, and with just
a click, a chart pops up showing the evapotranspiration trends for a given
area, for the current year and the past five years.
The chart can show monthly ET
trends, useful for understanding seasonal fluctuations, and also cumulative
trends, useful for understanding year-to-year changes in evapotranspiration.
“The OpenET team took a user-driven design approach from the beginning, and
each element of the Data Explorer and the open data services is there because a
water manager or farmer asked for it,” Melton explained. As we played around
with the map, it became apparent how much work was put into developing this
project. Scientists needed to improve models and assess the accuracy of data,
programmers had to develop the user interface and data services, designers
needed to make the interface intuitive enough to be impactful, agriculture and
environmental groups needed to help validate the model’s accuracy, and users of
all types needed to provide requirements and then test the product to make sure
their needs were actually met.
The OpenET consortium includes
NASA, USGS, USDA Agricultural Research Service (ARS), Environmental Defense
Fund (EDF), Google Earth Engine, California State University Monterey Bay
(CSUMB), Desert Research Institute (DRI), Habitat Seven, Chapman University,
Cornell University, University of Nebraska-Lincoln and close to a dozen other
universities and experts across the U.S. NASA Ames Research Center and CSUMB
have played key roles in the scientific and technical leadership of the effort
from the outset, working closely with DRI, EDF and the recently formed
non-profit OpenET, Inc. In addition, over 100 partners from the water
management, agriculture and conservation community provided user requirements
and assisted with the design and testing of the OpenET platform and tools.
“OpenET would not be possible
without the contributions of each one of those partners,” Melton said. “Both on
the implementation side and those who are translating the data from OpenET into
solutions to long standing challenges.”
Map of farmlands showing ET data for 2024. The cooler colors represent higher levels of evapotranspiration (ET), while warmer colors indicate areas with less ET. OpenET
Models like those built into OpenET
can be extremely useful tools for understanding patterns in ET and water use,
but are only helpful if their accuracy is known. The OpenET science team
recently completed the largest accuracy assessment to date for field-scale
satellite-based ET data, comparing the satellite data to ground-based
measurements at more than 150 sites across the U.S. Led by John Volk of the
Desert Research Institute, the study was published in Nature Water earlier this
year. A key finding was that across all sites, an ensemble value computed from
six different ET models performed the best overall, leveraging the strengths of
each individual satellite-driven model.
However, the study also found that
some models performed best for particular crop types or regions, which is
important information for water managers and farmers who need the most accurate
data possible. Publishing the results as an open access study with all data and
analysis made publicly available was also important to build trust in the data.
While the study highlighted some limitations of the models and priorities for
future research, the rigorous and reproducible accuracy assessment helps to
build user confidence that they can use the data, while being aware of the
expected accuracy for different applications of the data.
Bridging the Gap Between Farmers and Resource Managers
OpenET has already contributed to
one significant win for farmers that affects how water use will be monitored
and reported in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
This inland river delta covers
750,000 acres and is an important water resource in California, but one where
accelerated demand combined with habitat loss and water quality issues has led
to major concerns. In the Delta, large portions of the agricultural land are
below sea level. Levees protect the fields and contain the river channels that
supply water for irrigation. In 2023, the state began requiring farmers to
maintain a water meter or measuring device on each diversion, where water is
diverted from a river for irrigation. However, this measurement proved
challenging and costly as there are thousands of diversions in the Delta, and
the measuring equipment was inaccurate and difficult to maintain in this
environment. In addition, water users also had to pay for meters at the
locations where water that drained from the fields was pumped back over the
levees and into the river channels.
The Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta is a major water resource in California. Matthew Trump
“Mostly, what the state was
interested in was the consumptive use: how much (water) was actually removed
from the supply in that region,” Melton said. “So, it’s the perfect place for
using OpenET because evapotranspiration really is the majority of the consumptive
use in the Delta, if not all of it.”
After the launch of OpenET, farmers
in the Delta worked with the Delta Watermaster, the California State Water
Resources Control Board, the OpenET team and the Delta Measurement Consortium
to develop an alternative compliance plan that used OpenET data to help
streamline the water use required reporting for this complex region. Once the
alternative compliance plan was approved, Forrest Melton and Will Carrara of
NASA worked with the state Water Resources Control Board, the Delta Watermaster
and water management agencies, and Jordan Harding of HabitatSeven to implement
this solution. The Delta Alternative Compliance Plan, also known as the Delta ACP, allows farmers to use
OpenET data to estimate their water usage; enabling farmers to complete their
use reports in a matter of minutes.
“It’s the first time that
satellite-based evapotranspiration data has been automatically integrated with
a state-managed water reporting system,” Melton said.
Last year, more than 70% of farmers
in the Bay-Delta region chose to use OpenET and to report their water use
through the Delta ACP website, and they expect this percentage to continue to
increase over time.
“The best part is that it is saving
farmers hundreds of hours on preparing and submitting reports, avoiding
millions of dollars in costs for farmers to deploy and maintain meters, and
giving the state consistent and reproducible data on water use that has been
reviewed and approved by the water user,” Melton said.
According to Delta Watermaster, Jay
Ziegler, this approach has a clear benefit in the unique water flow setting of
the Delta. “In reality, OpenET – and the use of publicly accessible data
measuring ET is the only way to really discern consumptive use of water in the
Delta on a reliable basis,” Ziegler said. “Candidly, we don’t really have a
viable “plan B” in the absence of applying Open ET for water use reporting.”
“In reality, OpenET – and the use of publicly
accessible data measuring ET is the only way to really discern consumptive use
of water in the Delta on a reliable basis.
Jay ziegler, Sacramento-San
Joaquin Delta Watermaster
Water Beyond Borders
As water scarcity is increasingly
becoming an urgent issue all around the world, it’s easy to imagine how many
countries could benefit from OpenET data.
OpenET’s first international
partnership is led by Anderson Ruhoff, a professor in Hydrology and Remote Sensing at the Federal University of
Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, where his team developed an evapotranspiration model
called geeSEBAL for Brazil’s Water Agency.
Ruhoff learned about OpenET while
he was in the US on a visiting professorship in Nebraska. He was intrigued and
reached out to Melton who encouraged him to attend an upcoming conference in
Reno, Nevada, where OpenET would be featured. The conference was due to start
in just a few days time.
“So I had to find a last minute
ticket to Reno and I’m glad I bought it, because when I arrived there they
invited me to join Open ET. It was quite a coincidence,” Ruhoff said, smiling
as he remembered the spontaneous decision. “We adapted our model for the US and
started to participate in their work.”
In March, 2024, Ruhoff and OpenET
launched an extension of the tool, called OpenET Brazil, with financial support
from the Agência Nacional de Águas e Saneamento Básico (ANA), the Brazilian
national water agency. The tool, called OpenET Brazil, will have similar goals
as OpenET in the U.S., and the data collected will help improve Open ET’s
accuracy overall.
Melton feels this will be a “great
test case” for both working with new environmental conditions (in Brazil there
frequently is more cloud cover than in the US during key parts of the growing
season) and also developing new collaborations.
“The partnership will help us
figure out how we can work with international partners to make the ET data
useful,” Melton said. “The key aspect of our approach to geographic expansion
is that leading scientists in each country and region, like Dr. Ruhoff, will
lead the implementation, accuracy assessment, and the development of
applications and partnerships for their country.”
Brazil has one of the world’s
largest sources of freshwater, the Amazon River, and yet it can still be
affected by drought. This is partly due to the fact that deforestation in the
Amazon Rainforest has an impact on the entire region’s water cycle. Trees draw
water up from the soil and during photosynthesis they release vapor into the
atmosphere. This water vapor will accumulate and form precipitation. Trees are
“basically a huge water pump,” Ruhoff said, and the Amazon Rainforest is large
enough that it helps to produce the rainy season. But when deforestation is
allowed to happen over large areas, that mechanism is interrupted. As a result
of this disruption, the dry season is predicted to intensify, becoming longer
and dryer, which in turn can affect crop production in Brazil as well as the
rainfall that is critical for sustaining water supplies in Brazil and other
areas of South America.
“Water doesn’t see borders. It
doesn’t follow our rules,” Ruhoff said. “Deforestation in one place can affect
people thousands of kilometers away.”
“Water doesn’t see borders. It doesn’t follow our
rules. Deforestation in one place can affect people thousands of kilometers
away.
Anderson Ruhoff, Professor
of Hydrology and Remote Sensing, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul,
Brazil
Studying evapotranspiration can reveal
the impacts of deforestation with even more clarity. And importantly, it’s also
public information. “So not only the farmers and water managers but every
citizen can check how much water is being used in their area, especially during
drought. It’s democratic information in that way,” Ruhoff said. “I think it’s
important to have this information openly available and to try and reach as
many people as possible.”
Melton feels there’s the potential to
expand the project, if more people like Ruhoff are there to lead the way.
“There’s huge potential, but there do
need to be stakeholders that come to the table and say that this is something
that they’re interested in,” Melton said. “Water is so important and at times
so contentious that it’s really important the data is seen as trusted. When
there is a local leader, that substantially increases the likelihood that it
will be trusted, and most importantly, used to bring people together to develop
solutions.”
The geeSEBAL application that Anderson Ruhoff’s team developed, which now informs the OpenET platform. Science Direct/Anderson Ruhoff
Even when you live in a
water-scarce region like California it’s easy to take water for granted. What
platforms like OpenET can do for us, however, is make water, even in its most
diffuse form, more visible to everyone.
Written by Jane Berg and Rachel
Sender, co-published with the Bay Area Environmental Research Institute
To learn more about OpenET, visit https://etdata.org/
By: Milan Loiacono,
Science Communication Specialist
Source: OpenET: Balancing Water Supply and Demand in the West - NASA
No comments:
Post a Comment