Diversity in Approaches to Hydropower Flexibility in Water and Power
System Adaptation Strategies Under Climate Change Conditions
Abstract
Hydropower plants and large storage reservoirs upstream of
water-dependent power plants represent physical assets with a
substantial role in the function of both river and power grid systems.
Hydropower has the potential to play an important role in
decarbonization strategies as a means to achieve reliability and
resilience in an increasingly complex grid; for example, as a means to
offset variability in other renewable resources and provide long term
energy storage. The power grid and river systems are interlinked through
hydropower plants, resulting in hydropower operators needing to balance
potentially competing interests of water management, as well as power
demands. Despite this multisectoral dependency, the representation of
hydropower in power system resource adequacy studies typically differs
from the representation in water management adaptation studies,
especially at the regional scale. The objective of this presentation is
to clarify the concept of hydropower flexibility (and adaptation) in a
way that can bridge gaps between the tools used by and expectations of
water managers, hydropower operators and power system operators. The
developed qualitative multisystem, multiscale approach to hydropower
flexibility can be leveraged to highlight the value, facilitate the
compatibility and complementarity, and inform on the generalization of
technology innovation and climate change adaptation strategies.