Grid-wide subdaily hydrologic alteration under massive wind power penetration in Chile

J Environ Manage. 2015 May 1:154:183-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2015.02.017. Epub 2015 Feb 27.

Abstract

Hydropeaking operations can severely degrade ecosystems. As variable renewable sources (e.g. wind power) are integrated into a power grid, fluctuations in the generation-demand balance are expected to increase. In this context, compensating technologies, notably hydropower reservoir plants, could operate in a stronger peaking scheme. This issue calls for an integrated modeling of the entire power system, including not only hydropower reservoirs, but also all other plants. A novel methodology to study the link between the short-term variability of renewable energies and the subdaily hydrologic alteration, due to hydropower reservoir operations is presented. Grid operations under selected wind power portfolios are simulated using a short-term hydro-thermal coordination tool. The resulting turbined flows by relevant reservoir plants are then compared in terms of the Richard-Baker flashiness index to both the baseline and the natural flow regime. Those are then analyzed in order to: i) detect if there is a significant change in the degree of subdaily hydrologic alteration (SDHA) due to a larger wind penetration, and ii) identify which rivers are most affected. The proposed scheme is applied to Chile's Central Interconnect System (SIC) for scenarios up to 15% of wind energy penetration. Results show a major degree of SDHA under the baseline as compared to the natural regime. As wind power increases, so does the SDHA in two important rivers. This suggests a need for further ecological studies in those rivers, along with an analysis of operational constraints to limit the SDHA.

Keywords: Hydropeaking; Hydrothermal coordination; Reservoir operation; Subdaily hydrologic alteration; Variable renewable energy; Wind power.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Chile
  • Environment
  • Humans
  • Hydrology*
  • Power Plants*
  • Renewable Energy*
  • Rivers
  • Wind*