Assessing the energy potential of retrofitting the European hydropower fleet
About 50% of all hydropower plants (HPPs) worldwide were originally commissioned more than 40 years ago, so
that the advanced age of the fleet is a major concern across all continents, and especially in Europe. The
modernization of HPPs can generate several benefits in terms of generation, flexibility, safety, operation, and
may have neutral or even positive implications for the environment. In this work, we appraise several options for
the modernization of existing plants, with the exclusion of measures expected to increase the hydromorphological
pressure on water bodies (e.g. increase of withdrawals or new parallel waterways): dam
heightening, head loss reduction in waterways, increase of weighted efficiency of electro-mechanical equipment,
digitalization and inflow forecast, and floating photovoltaic (evaporation reduction). We provide an indicative
estimation of the additional power and annual generation that could be obtained compared to the current
condition. We estimate that the overall energy generation could be increased by 8.4% for European Union and
9.4% for the whole Europe by implementing the above-mentioned strategies. The additional energy gain
achievable by increasing the inflow was discussed but not included in the above mentioned overall indicator,
because it is very site-specific. The additional energy storage achievable by reservoir interconnection and coordinated
operation has been estimated in literature as 169 TWh. This suggests that the modernization of HPPs
can generate significant benefits in terms of energy, and should be considered as an important element of energy
policy, also considering the additional benefits in terms of reliability and flexibility of the energy system that it may deliver. The modernization options considered here, insofar as not entailing a worsening of the hydromorphological
alterations, are also expected to cause limited or no conflict with the environmental objectives
of water policies in Europe.
QUARANTA Emanuele;
AGGIDIS George;
BOES Robert M.;
COMOGLIO Claudio;
DE MICHELE Carlo;
PATRO Epari Ritesh;
GEORGIEVSKAIA Evgeniia;
HARBY Atle;
KOUGIAS Ioannis;
MUNTEAN Sebastian;
PEREZ-DIAZ Juan;
ROMERO-GOMEZ Pedro;
ROSA-CLOT Marco;
SCHLEISS Anton J.;
VAGNONI Elena;
WIRTH Markus;
PISTOCCHI Alberto;
2021-10-07
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
JRC125085
0196-8904 (online),
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0196890421008311?via%3Dihub,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC125085,
10.1016/j.enconman.2021.114655,
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