3 research outputs found
Surface Water Withdrawals for Marcellus Shale Gas Development: Performance of Alternative Regulatory Approaches in the Upper Ohio River Basin
Almost
all of the water used for developing Marcellus Shale gas
is withdrawn from surface water sources. State environmental and interstate
water authorities take different approaches to managing these withdrawals.
In the Upper Ohio River Basin, which covers the western third of Pennsylvania,
the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection requires that
all water sources used for development have an approved water management
plan. For surface water sources the plans stipulate the amount and
timing of withdrawals from each source as a function of annual streamflow
statistics. Neighboring regulatory authorities and some environmental
groups now favor the use of monthly streamflow statistics to establish
the conditions for water withdrawals. Our analysis indicates that,
given the state of flow measurement data in the Upper Ohio River Basin,
the annual streamflow statistics are more likely to prevent water
withdrawals during the driest times of the year when aquatic ecosystems
are most stressed, and to result in fewer and smaller occurrences
of computed low-flow ecodeficits
Additional file 1: of Stakeholder perceptions of water systems and hydro-climate information in Guanacaste, Costa Rica
Full Interview Protocol (English version). The full English-language version of the protocol used to guide the mental model interviews. (PDF 248 kb
Additional file 2: of Stakeholder perceptions of water systems and hydro-climate information in Guanacaste, Costa Rica
Full List of Codes and Sub-Codes used with descriptions. The full list of codes and sub-codes used in analyzing the interview transcripts, with descriptions. (PDF 255 kb