DC Utilizes Green Infrastructure to Manage Stormwater

^epa.gov/arc-x/dc-utilizes-green-infrastructure-manage-stormwater

Under a consent decree from the EPA to reduce combined sewer overflows
(CSOs), the District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority (DC Water)
developed a plan to construct three large holding tunnels to provide extra
capacity during high precipitation events. Upon further consideration of the
uncertainties regarding future precipitation extremes and the costs associated
with developing three large infrastructure projects, DC Water requested to
revise the agreement.

The revised plan replaces one tunnel with green infrastructure projects to
reduce the amount of stormwater runoff that the system has to handle. A
capacity metric (i.e., amount of stormwater runoff managed) associated with the
green infrastructure projects was adopted rather than an initial plan requiring a
defined financial commitment ($90 million) to better ensure the expected
stormwater reduction improvements.

Green infrastructure project: Blue Plains Wastewater Facility in Washington DC
Reinforces Facility Against Floods

DC Water reviewed the National Climate Assessment projections for the
Northeast to better understand potential future conditions, however no such
projections were included in the capacity agreement. While no climate
projections were included, the agreement does provides the District of Columbia
greater adaptive flexibility to scale and increase green infrastructure to
accommodate future precipitation extremes.

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Comparison of existing and modified plans.

DC Long-Term Control Plan, May 2015 (PDF) (890 pp,
40 K, )

With the installation of green infrastructure projects in the Rock Creek Park
corridor, the revised plan provides substantive environmental, economic, and
health benefits as early as 2017 as compared with the original project projection

of 2024. The revised plan, upon completion in 2030, is expected to reduce CSO releases by 96% (based upon current
precipitation levels).

How did they do it?

Applicable EPA

Tools

Realized current approach was insufficient to meet current and future climate
extremes

The Climate Resilience
Evaluation and Awareness
Tool (GREAT) can help
communities identify
expected vulnerabilities
from a changing climate.

Climate Resilience
Evaluation and Awareness
Tool (GREAT)

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Selected a unique adaptation option specific to local conditions

• DC Water developed and proposed a plan utilizing a mix of grey and green
infrastructure. The District has identified a variety of green infrastructure and low
impact development measures with potential for use, including rain barrels, grassed
swales, cisterns infiltration trenches, permeable pavements, increased tree cover, and
rooftop greening.

The Green Infrastructure
Wizard Tool can help
communities identify and
select green infrastructure
adaptation strategies
according to local
conditions.

Green Infrastructure
Wizard Tool

Defined performance-based metrics rather than financial

• DC Water committed to installing Green Infrastructure (PDF) (890 pp, 40 MB) to
absorb "...1.2 inches of rain falling on 365 impervious acres of land that currently does
not absorb stormwater..." If this commitment proves infeasible, the plan will revert to
using underground storage. This plan is projected to reduce CSO's by 96% and is
expected to be capable of handling more than 90% of storms (under baseline climate
conditions). DC Water has already completed preliminary green infrastructure
demonstration projects and is expected to complete an additional 44 acres of by June
2019.

The EPA SWMM and
Stormwater Calculator
Climate Assessment Tools
can help communities
simulate and evaluate
green infrastructure
performance against
projected climate impacts:

Storm Water Management
Model (SWMM)

Stormwater Calculator

Similar Cases and More Information

Increased precipitation events may lead to increased sewer overflows as well as threaten the water or wastewater utility
facilities themselves. For more information on what a Washington, D.C. wastewater facility is doing to adapt to climate change
and the threats from flooding, view Blue Plains Wastewater Facility Case. For information on a city that is moving wastewater
services away from an area vulnerable to flooding view the Iowa City Riverfront Master Plan.

•	Blue Plains Wastewater Facility in Washington DC Reinforces Facility Against Floods

•	Iowa City, Iowa Closes Vulnerable Wastewater Facility

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