Valued peaks: sustainable water allocation for small hydropower plants
in an era of explicit ecological needs
Abstract
Optimising hydropower operations to balance economic profitability and
support functioning ecosystem services is integral to river management
policy. In this article, we propose a multi-objective optimization
framework for small hydropower plants (SHPs) to evaluate trade-offs
among environmental flow scenarios. Specifically, we examine the balance
between short-term losses in hydropower generation and the potential for
compensatory benefits in the form of revenue from recreational ecosystem
services, irrespective of the direct beneficiary. Our framework
integrates a fish habitat model, a hydropower optimization model, and a
recreational ecosystem service model to evaluate each environmental flow
scenario. The optimisation process gives three outflow release
scenarios, informed by previous streamflow realisations (dam inflow),
and designed environmental flow constraints. The framework is applied
and tested for the river Kuusinkijoki in North-eastern Finland, which is
a habitat for migratory brown trout and grayling populations. We show
that the revenue loss due to the environmental flow constraints arises
through a reduction in revenue per generated energy unit and through a
reduction in turbine efficiency. Additionally, the simulation results
reveal that all the designed environmental flow constraints cannot be
met simultaneously. Under the environmental flow scenario with both
minimum flow and flow ramping rate constraints, the annual hydropower
revenue decreases by 16.5%. An annual increase of 8% in recreational
fishing visits offsets the revenue loss. The developed framework
provides knowledge of the costs and benefits of hydropower environmental
flow constraints and guides the prioritizing process of environmental
measures.