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HydroB次元官网网址檚 future in a warming world

Large-scale hydro facilities often means flooding land used for farming and human communities

People have harnessed energy from moving water for thousands of years. Greeks used various types of water wheels to grind grain in mills more than 2,000 years ago.

In the late 1800s, people figured out how to harness the power to produce electricity. Throughout the 20th century and into the 21st, hydropower has expanded, producing about 17 per cent of the worldB次元官网网址檚 electricity by 2014 and about 85 per cent of its renewable energy B次元官网网址 a trend that shows no signs of slowing.

According to the online magazine WaterWorld, B次元官网网址淎n expected 3,700 major dams may more than double the total electricity capacity of hydropower to 1,700 GW within the next two decades.B次元官网网址 That includes my home province of B.C., where the government has started a third dam on the Peace River at Site C.

But how B次元官网网址済reenB次元官网网址 is hydropower, and how viable is it in a warming world with increasing water fluctuations and shortages? To some extent, it depends on the type of facility.

The Center for Climate and Energy Solutions notes some large dams are used mainly for water storage or flood control with power generation an additional function, while some are used primarily to generate electricity. Small hydro such as run-of-river is installed on running water and doesnB次元官网网址檛 use water stored in reservoirs. Pumped storage facilities donB次元官网网址檛 generate additional energy, but store energy by pumping water from a lower reservoir to a higher one when demand and price are low, sometimes using renewable energy, and release water through turbines when price and demand are high. All have varying environmental impacts.

One of the biggest trade-offs with large-scale hydro facilities is that building them often means flooding land used for farming and human communities. Damming rivers also impedes fish B次元官网网址 even with technologies like fish ladders B次元官网网址 and can harm wildlife habitat and alter river temperatures, dissolved oxygen levels and flows.

And while hydropower creates fewer pollution and climate problems than fossil fuel power, it isnB次元官网网址檛 entirely clean. Clearing vegetation to build a dam and flood land can release greenhouse gases. And as vegetation decays and water levels fluctuate, methane B次元官网网址 a greenhouse gas far more potent than carbon dioxide B次元官网网址 can build up and escape from reservoirs.

Ironically, although hydropower is seen as an energy source that helps slow global warming, in many areas its viability is threatened by climate change. Rising greenhouse gas emissions and a warming world affect the entire hydrological cycle B次元官网网址 surface and ground water, glaciers, precipitation, runoff and evaporation. Shifting precipitation patterns and increased droughts are changing water levels in rivers and behind hydro dams.

The massive Hoover Dam on the Colorado River is operating at 30-per-cent capacity, and new turbines have to be installed at lower elevation because of low precipitation and drought. In Nepal, B次元官网网址渓ow water levels rendered a brand-new dam project ineffective and cut off the water supply farther downstream,B次元官网网址 said John Matthews, director of fresh water and adaptation at Conservation International, in Scientific American.

He and co-authors of a study in the journal PLoS Biology wrote that climate change puts 40 per cent of hydro development investments at risk. They recommend an approach to dams and hydro that takes climate change into account, by building projects in stages so adjustments can be made as more is known about climate patterns, or by B次元官网网址渂uilding with natureB次元官网网址 rather than on top of it.

As more environmentally benign power technologies become increasingly cost-effective and viable, the U.S. is removing older dams, many of which donB次元官网网址檛 have fish ladders, because costs to maintain and repair them are too high, as are environmental impacts.

Hydro power will remain part of the clean-energy equation, but we need to find the least disruptive, most efficient methods. Peter Gleick, president and co-founder of CaliforniaB次元官网网址檚 Pacific Institute, says the key to supplying energy to growing populations in a warming world will be to use a diversity of power sources. B次元官网网址淲e need to design our energy systems to be resilient in the face of growing uncertainty about technology and climate and national security and all of the factors that affect energy,B次元官网网址 he told online magazine Slate.





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