1st Edition

Interactions between Land Use and Flood Management in the Chi River Basin UNESCO-IHE PhD Thesis

By Kittiwet Kuntiyawichai Copyright 2012
    240 Pages
    by CRC Press

    The damages and hardships caused by floods and flooding remain an issue and are continuously increasing in the Chi River Basin, Thailand. It is difficult to make an accurate assessment of the costs and consequences associated with floods. However, flood hazards can also be seen as an opportunity, a chance to correct possible flaws and ambiguities in the flood management.

    The Chi River system cannot handle the regularly occurring floods, consequently, flooding of the low-lying areas occurs on a regular basis. Therefore, an integrated flood management framework needs to be developed to minimize the negative effects of floods of different magnitude. In response, a hydrological model (SWAT) and a hydraulic (1D/2D SOBEK) model were integrated to simulate floods in detailed way and to analyse the current system. A reliable simulation of the river flows and inundated areas is an essential component of a holistic flood management plan.

    The developed modelling framework enabled to analyse the impact of different structural measures such as river normalisation, green river (bypass), and retention basin. In addition, non-structural measures including reservoir operation and spatial land use planning were assessed in their capability to protect people and valuable infrastructure. For each measure, several possible scenarios were tested and evaluated based on economic and technical efficiency criteria to determine the most promising and efficient scenario. However, effective interventions may involve a judicious combination of flood mitigation approaches, rather than reliance on a stand-alone solution. A truly optimum combination of aforesaid measures was then chosen since it could considerably reduce flood extent and its damage.

    Finally, the study illustrates the effects of land use changes on floods, which indicated little or no significant potential impact on flood regime at river basin level, but rather at sub-basin scale. This finding is important for a better understanding of the scale and direction of impacts of developments in the future. Integrated land use planning was shown to be an essential component of a comprehensive flood management framework.

    1. Introduction

    2. Background

    3. Water resources and land use pattern in the Chi River Basin

    4. Impact assessment of land use on flooding conditions

    5. Mathematical modelling

    6. Application of mathematical models for flood investigations

    7. Implications for future flood management actions in the Chi River Basin

    8. Evaluation

    Biography

    Kittiwet Kuntiyawichai (1977, Buriram, Thailand) received a BEng degree in Transportation Engineering from Suranaree University of Technology in Thailand (1999) and worked as lecturer in the Department of Civil Engineering, Buriram Technical College.
    In 2004 he received his Master’s degree in Water Resources Engineering at the Department of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Khon Kaen University, Thailand, with the thesis entitled ‘An application of INFOWORKS RS model for flood routing in Chi River Basin’.
    In 2005, he joined the Hydraulic Engineering - Land and Water Development (HELWD) Core, Department of Water Engineering, UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education, Delft, the Netherlands, for his PhD study.