Impacts of climate change on stream flow and hydro power generation in the Alpine region

被引:1
|
作者
T. Wagner
M. Themeßl
A. Schüppel
A. Gobiet
H. Stigler
S. Birk
机构
[1] University of Graz,Institute of Earth Sciences, NAWI Graz Geocenter
[2] Wegener Center for Climate and Global Change,Institute of Electricity Economics and Energy Innovation
[3] TU Graz,undefined
[4] Climate Change Center Austria - Servicezentrum,undefined
[5] Elsta-Mosdorfer GmbH,undefined
[6] ZAMG - Zentralanstalt für Meteorologie und Geodynamik,undefined
来源
关键词
Climate change; Rainfall-runoff modelling; Hydro power; Renewable energy; Alpine region;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Electricity generated by hydro power is the most widely used form of renewable energy, and as such, its vulnerability to climate change is of great interest. The aim of this work is to estimate the change in river discharge characteristics in the Alpine region due to possible impacts of climate and the related changes in the power generation of run-of-river hydro power plants up to 2050. Four representative bias-corrected climate simulations from the ENSEMBLES project are chosen based on the SRES greenhouse gas emission scenario pathway A1B. Data of these simulations serve as input for a lumped-parameter rainfall-runoff model at a monthly time step, which is calibrated on discharge data of gauging stations along important rivers in the Alpine region. A power plant model fed with runoff data generated by the hydrological model is used to compute changes in the long-term average annual net electrical energy output of hydro power plants for the whole Alpine region; while the model for Austria is based on known technical parameters of the power plants, a more simplified approach is employed elsewhere. The general warming trend observed in all four climate scenarios causes to various degrees a seasonal shift towards earlier runoff. However, more diverse changes in precipitation for the different climate scenarios and time periods result in diverging hydrological projections. Although the annual runoff is found to decrease in some scenarios, the generally observed shift of runoff towards the winter season that typically shows higher energy consumption in the Alpine region suggests that the overall impact for the electricity sector tends to be positive rather than negative. Estimated changes in the average annual electricity generation of run-of-river plants are generally found to be within a single-digit percentage range but can be either positive or negative depending on the climate scenario. The estimated ranges reflect the diversity (uncertainty) of the climate models; the total bandwidth of possible changes in the water availability and hydro power generation in the Alpine region up to 2050 is assumed to be even higher, because of other uncertainties in the model chain that are not explicitly considered here. Nevertheless, as the general regional trends and bandwidth of changes in runoff and hydro power production strongly depend on the future changes in precipitation, the results of this work provide reasonable orders of magnitude of expected changes and are seen as a first step towards an improved understanding of climate impacts on hydro power production within the entire Alpine region.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Impacts of climate change on stream flow and hydro power generation in the Alpine region
    Wagner, T.
    Themessl, M.
    Schueppel, A.
    Gobiet, A.
    Stigler, H.
    Birk, S.
    ENVIRONMENTAL EARTH SCIENCES, 2017, 76 (01)
  • [2] SENSITIVITY OF ALPINE STREAM ECOSYSTEMS TO CLIMATE-CHANGE AND HUMAN IMPACTS
    MCGREGOR, G
    PETTS, GE
    GURNELL, AM
    MILNER, AM
    AQUATIC CONSERVATION-MARINE AND FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS, 1995, 5 (03) : 233 - 247
  • [3] Climate change impacts on wind power generation
    Pryor, Sara C.
    Barthelmie, Rebecca J.
    Bukovsky, Melissa S.
    Leung, L. Ruby
    Sakaguchi, Koichi
    NATURE REVIEWS EARTH & ENVIRONMENT, 2020, 1 (12) : 627 - 643
  • [4] Climate change impacts on wind power generation
    Sara C. Pryor
    Rebecca J. Barthelmie
    Melissa S. Bukovsky
    L. Ruby Leung
    Koichi Sakaguchi
    Nature Reviews Earth & Environment, 2020, 1 : 627 - 643
  • [5] Snow cover in the Swiss Alpine region -: impacts as a result of climate change
    Schädler, B
    Gellens, D
    Barbieux, K
    Roulin, E
    Aschwanden, H
    Gellens-Meulenberghs, F
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE SECOND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CLIMATE AND WATER, VOLS 1-3, 1998, : 76 - 85
  • [6] Climate Change Effects on Solar, Wind and Hydro Power Generation
    Penmetsa, Vikramaditya
    Holbert, Keith E.
    2019 51ST NORTH AMERICAN POWER SYMPOSIUM (NAPS), 2019,
  • [7] Climate Change Impacts in Alpine Environments
    Grabherr, Georg
    Gottfried, Michael
    Pauli, Harald
    GEOGRAPHY COMPASS, 2010, 4 (08): : 1133 - 1153
  • [8] Combined Flow Abstraction and Climate Change Impacts on an Aggrading Alpine River
    Bakker, M.
    Costa, A.
    Silva, T. A.
    Stutenbecker, L.
    Girardclos, S.
    Loizeau, J. -L.
    Molnar, P.
    Schlunegger, F.
    Lane, S. N.
    WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2018, 54 (01) : 223 - 242
  • [9] Assessing climate change impacts on alpine stream-flow and vegetation water use: mining the linkages with subsurface hydrologic processes
    Tague, Christina L.
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2009, 23 (12) : 1815 - 1819
  • [10] Climate change impacts on hydropower in an alpine catchment
    Maran, S.
    Volonterio, M.
    Gaudard, L.
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY, 2014, 43 : 15 - 25