@misc{d663e8e1c6704f638e403cfae4bbca02,
title = "Hydropower Flexibility and Environmental Tradeoffs Analysis",
abstract = "The importance of hydropower increases as the power grid evolves with the higher variable renewable contribution. As conventional thermal power plants are retired, the importance of hydropower contribution increases to balance the variability of solar and wind generation. However, reservoir water resources are constrained by multiple constraints, and variability of water inflow to the reservoirs creates limitations to dam water releases for power grid needs. Coordinating multiple tools, including water resources, ecological, and technical and economic power grid modeling, informs dam water releases. The case study, the Columbia River Basin multipurpose reservoir project, is operated for hydropower production and many other purposes considering the aquatic habitat of the river basin. Specifically, the river basin fish population is a vital element for the tribal community of the river basin. We integrated a production cost model, a water resource model, and decades of tribal knowledge to analyze the fish-friendly way of operating Columbia hydropower scheduling and grid impacts. We measure power grid impacts for various water resources planning scenarios in terms of total system operating cost, system reliability indicators, changes in wind and solar generation and curtailments, local marginal prices, and revenue for hydropower producers. The study results inform reservoir operating rules decisions from hydropower power producers, system operators, other water users, tribes, environmentalists, and other stakeholders.",
keywords = "Columbia River, dam, ecology, environmental, fish, hydropower, modeling, operation, power grid, production cost model, tribal, water",
author = "{De Silva}, Thushara",
year = "2024",
language = "American English",
series = "Presented at 2024 Informs Annual Meeting, 20-23 October 2024, Seattle, Washington",
type = "Other",
}