Realizing ecosystem-safe hydropower from dams

被引:3
|
作者
Ahmad, Shahryar Khalique [1 ]
Hossain, Faisal [1 ]
机构
[1] Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Univ. of Washington, More Hall 201, Seattle,WA,98195, United States
来源
Renewables: Wind, Water, and Solar | 2020年 / 7卷 / 01期
关键词
59;
D O I
10.1186/s40807-020-00060-9
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
For clean hydropower generation while sustaining ecosystems, minimizing harmful impacts and balancing multiple water needs is an integral component. One particularly harmful effect not managed explicitly by hydropower operations is thermal destabilization of downstream waters. To demonstrate that the thermal destabilization by hydropower dams can be managed while maximizing energy production, we modelled thermal change in downstream waters as a function of decision variables for hydropower operation (reservoir level, powered/spillway release, storage), forecast reservoir inflow and air temperature for a dam site with in situ thermal measurements. For data-limited regions, remote sensing-based temperature estimation algorithm was established using thermal infrared band of Landsat ETM+ over multiple dams. The model for water temperature change was used to impose additional constraints of tolerable downstream cooling or warming (1–6 °C of change) on multi-objective optimization to maximize hydropower. A reservoir release policy adaptive to thermally optimum levels for aquatic species was derived. The novel concept was implemented for Detroit dam in Oregon (USA). Resulting benefits to hydropower generation strongly correlated with allowable flexibility in temperature constraints. Wet years were able to satisfy stringent temperature constraints and produce substantial hydropower benefits, while dry years, in contrast, were challenging to adhere to the upstream thermal regime.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Hydropower potential on Zimbabwe's major dams
    Mungwena, W
    RENEWABLE ENERGY, 2002, 25 (03) : 455 - 462
  • [22] Minimum Reservoir Water Level in Hydropower Dams
    Hamed Sarkardeh
    Chinese Journal of Mechanical Engineering, 2017, 30 (04) : 1017 - 1024
  • [23] HYDROPOWER - INFLATION-PROOF ENERGY FROM WATER-SUPPLY DAMS
    LINZELL, LE
    JOURNAL AMERICAN WATER WORKS ASSOCIATION, 1980, 72 (06): : 321 - 325
  • [24] Minimum Reservoir Water Level in Hydropower Dams
    Hamed Sarkardeh
    Chinese Journal of Mechanical Engineering, 2017, (04) : 1017 - 1024
  • [25] Minimum Reservoir Water Level in Hydropower Dams
    Sarkardeh, Hamed
    CHINESE JOURNAL OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING, 2017, 30 (04) : 1017 - 1024
  • [26] Dams for hydropower and irrigation: Trends, challenges, and alternatives
    Schmitt, Rafael Jan Pablo
    Rosa, Lorenzo
    RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS, 2024, 199
  • [27] An investigation of small hydropower potential from multipurpose dams in the Porsuk River Basin
    Bakis, Recep
    ENERGY EDUCATION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PART A-ENERGY SCIENCE AND RESEARCH, 2011, 27 (01): : 105 - 122
  • [28] Hydrologic considerations for safe dams
    Holler, AG
    ASSOCIATION OF STATE DAM SAFETY OFFICIALS 1998 ANNUAL CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS, 1998, : 873 - 882
  • [29] Hydropower dams threaten freshwater Chilean fish species: What dams and what species?
    Laborde, Anita
    Habit, Evelyn
    Link, Oscar
    NINTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON FLUVIAL HYDRAULICS (RIVER FLOW 2018), 2018, 40
  • [30] Flood control across hydropower dams: The value of safety
    Ntemiroglou, Christina
    Sakki, Georgia-Konstantina
    Efstratiadis, Andreas
    ROLE OF DAMS AND RESERVOIRS IN A SUCCESSFUL ENERGY TRANSITION, ECS 2023, 2023, : 187 - 198