Application Multi-Objective Robust Decision-Making to the Design of Run-ofRiver Hydropower Plants

Author(s):  
Veysel Yildiz ◽  
Charles Rougé ◽  
Solomon Brown

<p>Hydropower is a comparatively cheap, reliable, sustainable, and renewable<br>source of energy. Run of River (RoR) hydropower plants are characterised by a<br>negligible storage capacity and by generation almost completely dependent on the<br>timing and size of river flows. Their environmental footprint is minimal compared to that<br>of reservoir-powered plants, and they are much easier to deploy.<br>This work uses and extends HYPER, a state-of-the-art toolbox that finds the<br>design parameters that maximise either the RoR plant’s power production or its net<br>economic profit. Design parameters include turbine type (Kaplan, Francis, Pelton and<br>Crossflow), configuration (single or two in parallel), and design flow, along with<br>penstock diameter and thickness, admissible suction head, and specific and rotational<br>speed.<br>This work extends HYPER to realise hydropower system design that is robust<br>to climate variability and change and to changing economic conditions. It uses the many<br>objective robust decision making (MORDM) approach through the following steps: (1)<br>an explicit three objective formulation is introduced to explore how design parameter<br>choices balance investment cost, average annual revenue, and drought year (first<br>percentile) revenue, (2) coupling of a multi-objective evolutionary algorithm (here,<br>AMALGAM) with HYPER to solve the problem using 1,000 years of synthetic<br>streamflow data obtained with the Hirsch-Nowak streamflow generator, (3) sampling<br>of deeply uncertain factors to analyse robustness to climate change as well as financial<br>conditions (electricity prices and interest rates), (4) quantification of robustness across<br>these deeply uncertain states of the world. We also extend HYPER by adding the<br>possibility to consider three-turbine RoR plants.<br>The HYPER-MORDM approach is applied to a proposed RoR hydropower plant<br>to be built on Mukus River in Van province which is located in Eastern Anatolia region<br>of Turkey. Preliminary results suggest that applying MORDM approach to RoR<br>hydropower plants provides insights into the trade-offs between installation cost and<br>hydropower production, while supporting design with a range of viable alternatives to<br>help them determine which design and RoR plant operation is most robust and reliable<br>for given site conditions and river stream characteristics. Results confirm earlier<br>findings that installation of more than one turbine in a hydropower plant enhances<br>power production significantly by providing operational flexibility in the face of variable<br>streamflows. When contrasting robustness of a design with its benefit / cost ratio, a<br>classic measure of performance of hydropower system design which accounts only for<br>annual revenues and cost, designs with the highest benefit / cost ratios do not<br>necessarily perform well in terms of dry year revenue. They also show less robustness<br>to both climate change (and associated drying) and to evolving financial conditions<br>than the designs that do better balance average annual revenue with dry year revenue</p>

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claire Kathryn Aksamit ◽  
Mauro Carolli ◽  
Davide Vanzo ◽  
Christine Weber ◽  
Martin Schmid

As the demand for hydroelectricity progresses worldwide, small hydropower operators are increasingly examining the feasibility of using existing infrastructure (e.g., settling basins) in run-of-the-river schemes for intermittent power production. Such flexible production causes short-term discharge fluctuations (hydropeaking) in downstream reaches with potential adverse effects for the sensitive fauna and flora in alpine streams. In an experimental field study on a previously unregulated section of the upper Rhone River (Switzerland), we measured density and composition of macroinvertebrate drift in two habitats (riffle, pool) following a 15-minute hydropeaking wave. The experimental hydropeaking was replicated five times over 14 days with decreasing recovery times between peaks (8, 3, 2 days, and 24 h), and drift measurements were compared with kick samples for the benthic community. Results from the kick sampling showed that benthic macroinvertebrate abundance and composition did not significantly change between the experimental peaks. There were habitat specific reactions in macroinvertebrate drift to hydropeaking, with the pool experiencing more pronounced drift abundances than the riffle. Overall, drift abundance was not significantly correlated with recovery time, but results indicate taxa-specific differences. This research advocates for the importance of completing more in-situ field experiments in order to better understand the ecological impact of flexible power production in small hydropower plants.


2017 ◽  
Vol 607-608 ◽  
pp. 294-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Yan ◽  
Fulco Ludwig ◽  
He Qing Huang ◽  
Saskia E. Werners

2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (7) ◽  
pp. 2530-2546
Author(s):  
Mohammad Reza Goodarzi ◽  
Hamed Vagheei ◽  
Rabi H. Mohtar

Abstract The interdependent fundamental systems, water and energy, face abundant challenges, one of which is climate change, which is expected to aggravate water and energy securities. The hydropower industry's benefits have led to its development and growth around the world. Nonetheless, climate change is expected to disturb the future performance of hydropower plants. This study looks at the Seimareh Hydropower Plant to assess the potential vulnerability of hydropower plants to climate change. Results indicate that climate change will affect the area's hydrological variables and suggest an increase in temperatures and decrease in precipitation during a 30-year future period (2040–2069). It is predicted that Seimareh Dam's inflow will decrease by between 5.2% and 13.4% in the same period. These hydrological changes will affect the Seimareh plant's performance: current predictions are that the total energy produced will decrease by between 8.4% and 16.3%. This research indicates the necessity of considering climate change impacts in designing and maintaining hydraulic structures to reach their optimal performance.


2014 ◽  
Vol 5 (03) ◽  
pp. 333-346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fran Sussman ◽  
Anne Grambsch ◽  
Jia Li ◽  
Christopher P. Weaver

Abstract:Over the past half-century or more, economists have developed a robust literature on the theory and practice of benefit-cost analysis (BCA) as applied to diverse projects and policies. Recent years have seen a growing demand for practical applications of BCA to climate change policy questions. As economists seek to meet this demand, they face challenges that arise from the nature of climate change impacts, such as the long time frame and the potential for non-marginal changes, the importance of intangible effects, and the need to grapple with Knightian uncertainty. As a result of these and other characteristics of climate change, many of the fundamental tenets of BCA are coming under scrutiny and the limits of BCA’s methodological and practical boundaries are being tested. This special issue assembles a set of papers that review the growing body of literature on the economics of climate change. The papers describe the state of the literature valuing climate change impacts, both globally and at more disaggregated levels. The papers also discuss the challenges economists face in applying BCA to support climate change decision making and adaptation planning. This introduction provides background and context on the current use of BCA in climate change analysis, and sets each paper firmly in that context, identifying also areas for future research. While the challenges in conducting BCA and interpreting its results are significant, across the papers it becomes clear that economic analysis in general, and the tools and methods of BCA in particular, have a central role to play in supporting decision-making about how to respond to climate change.


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