Sustaining environmental flows in water-deficient rivers via inter-basin
hydropower transfer
Abstract
In water-deficient rivers, environmental flows (e-flows) are usually
sustained via inter-basin water transfer projects from water-sufficient
rivers, but these projects incur tremendous costs and may lead to many
negative ecological effects, such as ecological invasion. This research
proposed to transfer hydropower instead of water from water-sufficient
rivers, because hydropower could substitute for water to promote
economic development and reduce water withdrawal from water-deficient
rivers. In this research, we established a computable general
equilibrium model to analyze the substitution of hydropower for water in
a water-deficient river basin, and determined the water withdrawal
volume that could be reduced (conserved water). In addition, we adopted
a range-of-variability approach to measure the effectiveness of e-flow
provisions, and optimized the use of the conserved water to better
maintain e-flows. The Luanhe River was adopted as a study case. The
results showed that: the water-hydropower equivalent decreased as the
transferred hydropower into the Luanhe River basin increased; a
transferred hydropower amount of 22.46 kWh/s, equivalent to 18.30 m3/s
conserved water, was optimal for the river basin; the conserved water
should be distributed to the Luanhe River in the proportions of
0.55:0.1:0.35 during the wet, normal and dry seasons, respectively; the
policy could transform the macro-economy toward a lower air-pollution
pattern.