Gema Carmona
Technical University of Madrid
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Featured researches published by Gema Carmona.
Environmental Modelling and Software | 2013
Gema Carmona; Consuelo Varela-Ortega; John Bromley
Following the Integrated Water Resources Management approach, the European Water Framework Directive demands Member States to develop water management plans at the catchment level. Those plans have to integrate the different interests and must be developed with stakeholder participation. To face these requirements, managers need tools to assess the impacts of possible management alternatives on natural and socio-economic systems. These tools should ideally be able to address the complexity and uncertainties of the water system, while serving as a platform for stakeholder participation. The objective of our research was to develop a participatory integrated assessment model, based on the combination of a crop model, an economic model and a participatory Bayesian network, with an application in the middle Guadiana sub-basin, in Spain. The methodology is intended to capture the complexity of water management problems, incorporating the relevant sectors, as well as the relevant scales involved in water management decision making. The integrated model has allowed us testing different management, market and climate change scenarios and assessing the impacts of such scenarios on the natural system (crops), on the socio-economic system (farms) and on the environment (water resources). Finally, this integrated assessment modelling process has allowed stakeholder participation, complying with the main requirements of current European water laws.
Journal of Environmental Management | 2013
Gema Carmona; Consuelo Varela-Ortega; John Bromley
A participatory modelling process has been conducted in two areas of the Guadiana river (the upper and the middle sub-basins), in Spain, with the aim of providing support for decision making in the water management field. The area has a semi-arid climate where irrigated agriculture plays a key role in the economic development of the region and accounts for around 90% of water use. Following the guidelines of the European Water Framework Directive, we promote stakeholder involvement in water management with the aim to achieve an improved understanding of the water system and to encourage the exchange of knowledge and views between stakeholders in order to help building a shared vision of the system. At the same time, the resulting models, which integrate the different sectors and views, provide some insight of the impacts that different management options and possible future scenarios could have. The methodology is based on a Bayesian network combined with an economic model and, in the middle Guadiana sub-basin, with a crop model. The resulting integrated modelling framework is used to simulate possible water policy, market and climate scenarios to find out the impacts of those scenarios on farm income and on the environment. At the end of the modelling process, an evaluation questionnaire was filled by participants in both sub-basins. Results show that this type of processes are found very helpful by stakeholders to improve the system understanding, to understand each others views and to reduce conflict when it exists. In addition, they found the model an extremely useful tool to support management. The graphical interface, the quantitative output and the explicit representation of uncertainty helped stakeholders to better understand the implications of the scenario tested. Finally, the combination of different types of models was also found very useful, as it allowed exploring in detail specific aspects of the water management problems.
Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management | 2011
Gema Carmona; José-Luis Molina; John Bromley; Consuelo Varela-Ortega; José Luis García-Aróstegui
Object-oriented Bayesian networks (OOBNs) have recently been introduced to model water systems that can be represented as repetitive patterns. This paper shows the way in which OOBNs can be used as a groundwater management decision support system in two Spanish case studies. The two areas, in the southern and eastern parts of inland Spain, are characterized by a semiarid climate, water scarcity, and frequent droughts; consequently, the agrarian economy in both cases depends on the provision of irrigation from groundwater sources. Both case studies are illustrative examples of conflict among various water actors, complexity, and uncertainty about the consequences of water management actions. Each study is approached from a different viewpoint: one from an agroeconomic and the other from a hydrogeological perspective. The sites display different degrees of aquifer overexploitation and agrarian profitability. This indicates that, in each case, the effects generated by water management interventions and the t...
Ecology and Society | 2010
Pedro Zorrilla; Gema Carmona; Africa de la Hera; Consuelo Varela-Ortega; Pedro Martínez-Santos; John Bromley; Hans Jørgen Henriksen
Water Resources Management | 2011
Gema Carmona; Consuelo Varela-Ortega; John Bromley
Archive | 2007
Gema Carmona; Consuelo Varela-Ortega
Archive | 2013
Consuelo Varela Ortega; Paloma Esteve; Irene Blanco; Gema Carmona; Jorge Ruiz Fernández; Tamara Rabah
2008 International Congress, August 26-29, 2008, Ghent, Belgium | 2008
Gema Carmona; Consuelo Varela-Ortega
Archive | 2013
Consuelo Varela-Ortega; Paloma Esteve; Irene Blanco; Gema Carmona
Proceedings of 2011 International Congress European Association of Agricultural Economists | 2011 International Congress European Association of Agricultural Economists | 30/08/2011 - 02/08/2011 | Zurich, Dinamarca | 2011
Gema Carmona; Consuelo Varela-Ortega; John Bromley