Title
Estimation of Reservoir Discharges from Lake Nasser and Roseires Reservoir in the Nile Basin Using Satellite Altimetry and Imagery Data
Abstract
This paper presents the feasibility of estimating discharges from Roseires Reservoir (Sudan) for the period from 2002 to 2010 and Aswan High Dam/Lake Nasser (Egypt) for the periods 1999-2002 and 2005-2009 using satellite altimetry and imagery with limited in situ data. Discharges were computed using the water balance of the reservoirs. Rainfall and evaporation data were obtained from public domain data sources. In situ measurements of inflow and outflow (for validation) were obtained, as well. The other water balance components, such as the water level and surface area, for derivation of the change of storage volume were derived from satellite measurements. Water levels were obtained from Hydroweb for Roseires Reservoir and Hydroweb and Global Reservoir and Lake Monitor (GRLM) for Lake Nasser. Water surface areas were derived from Landsat TM/ETM+ images using the Normalized Difference Water Index (NDWI). The water volume variations were estimated by integrating the area-level relationship of each reservoir. For Roseires Reservoir, the water levels from Hydroweb agreed well with in situ water levels (RMSE = 0.92 m; R-2 = 0.96). Good agreement with in situ measurements were also obtained for estimated water volume (RMSE = 23%; R-2 = 0.94) and computed discharge (RMSE = 18%; R-2 = 0.98). The accuracy of the computed discharge was considered acceptable for typical reservoir operation applications. For Lake Nasser, the altimetry water levels also agreed well with in situ levels, both for Hydroweb (RMSE = 0.72 m; R-2 = 0.81) and GRLM (RMSE = 0.62 m; R-2 = 0.96) data. Similar agreements were also observed for the estimated water volumes (RMSE = 10%-15%). However, the estimated discharge from satellite data agreed poorly with observed discharge, Hydroweb (RMSE = 70%; R-2 = 0.09) and GRLM (RMSE = 139%; R-2 = 0.36). The error could be attributed to the high sensitivity of discharge to errors in storage volume because of the immense reservoir compared to inflow/outflow series. It may also be related to unaccounted spills into the Toshka Depression, overestimation of water inflow and errors in open water evaporation. Therefore, altimetry water levels and satellite imagery data can be used as a source of information for monitoring the operation of Roseires Reservoir with a fairly low uncertainty, while the errors of Lake Nasser are too large to allow for the monitoring of its operation.
Year
DOI
Venue
2014
10.3390/rs6087522
REMOTE SENSING
Keywords
Field
DocType
satellite altimetry,Landsat,reservoir discharge,Lake Nasser,Roseires Reservoir,Nile Basin
Altimeter,Satellite,Satellite imagery,Water balance,Hydrology,Remote sensing,Outflow,Geology,Inflow,Water level,Precipitation
Journal
Volume
Issue
Citations 
6
8
6
PageRank 
References 
Authors
1.14
0
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
eric muala161.14
y mohamed261.48
Zheng Duan3498.41
pieter van der zaag461.81