Results  /  Environmental measures impact on hydropower systems

Environmental measures impact on hydropower systems

The use of fictive storage can help to better document lost flexibility in the hydropower system when changing or introducing new environmental measures.

Environmental measures impact on hydropower systems

The use of fictive storage can help to better document lost flexibility in the hydropower system when changing or introducing new environmental measures.

Photo: Atle Harby

What makes hydropower so good compared to the other renewable sources such as solar and wind power is that it can be stored and used when needed. This makes it flexible. When environmental measures are introduced to protect nature from the negative effects of hydropower, this flexibility is reduced. The producer cannot, for example, stop all production to save water during periods of drought, because there is a requirement that they must maintain a minimum flow of water in the waterway below the power plant.

In HydroCen, the researchers have tried to find a way to measure this loss of flexibility in the hydropower system due to the introduction or change in environmental restrictions. This is to add this information to existing methods for measuring flexibility.

Use of fictitious storages 

Together with Vattenfall R&D, the researchers have therefore tested a method called equivalent electrical storage (EEL). This represents a storage that describes the loss of flexibility in a hydropower system because of changes in the way one is allowed to operate the power system. The storage is described with a storage capacity (GWh) and power (MW). The results are based on data from selected case studies, where the stochastic optimization model ProdRisk is used to provide the data basis.

Using the analogy of a fictitious storage (for example, a battery), the method provides a visual approximation of the flexibility capacity of the hydropower system.

The figure shows an illustration of the concept around the EEL method.

More testing is needed prior to validation 

The method needs more testing to be validated and put to use on simulation results from a stochastic optimization model, such as ProdRisk. It will then have the potential to help look at changes in flexibility due to new restrictions in hydropower systems.

Contact

Arild Helseth, SINTEF Energi

Siri Mathisen, SINTEF Energi

Project information

Project name:
Environmental measures impact on hydro power system (FlexMet) 

Duration:
2022-2023

Work Package in HydroCen:
Market and services

Partners

Publications

Measuring the Impact of Environmental Constraints on Hydropower Flexibility

Siri Mathisen, Birger Mo, Arild Helseth, Johan Bladh & Jonas Funkquist (2022)

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