Impact of Climate Change on Hydropower Generation: A Case Study of Devighat Hydropower Station
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IOE Pulchowk Campus
Abstract
The proper study of climatic parameters is the most important, yet somewhat
neglected aspect during the design, construction, and operation of most of the
hydropower plants in Nepal. This research aims to screen climate change's impact on
hydrology and hydro energy production at Devighat Hydropower Station a cascade of
the Trishuli Hydropower Plant in Nepal.
The study implements a simulation model developed on the Arc SWAT
application using the spatial-meteorological data inputs of the basin. SUFI-2 algorithm
is used for calibration and validation purposes. The temperature and precipitation time
series data from 1997 to 2019 are used to create the baseline scenario. In order to
evaluate future hydropower production, the future climatic dataset (2023-2100) was
created using a group of five CMIP6 models from the most recent generations under
two Shared Socio-Economic Pathways (SSP245 and SSP585).
Model calibration was performed from 2000-2010 for eleven years and
validation from 2011-2019 for ten years. The Trishuli Basin has clearly seen the effects
of climate change, with observable changes in climatic variables. Clear predictions
point to a significant increase in the basin's temperature and precipitation. It is projected
that the basin's average annual flow would significantly increase. The yearly flow is
expected to go down by 1.4% in the near future under the SSP245 Scenario, but to go
up by 4% and 7.4% in the mid-and far future, respectively. Similar to the SSP585
Scenario, the yearly flow is anticipated to climb by 14.5% and 26.5% in the mid- and
long-term, respectively, before rising by 1.1% in the near future. In the near future, midfuture, and far future, respectively, yearly generation is predicted to rise by 4.3%, 3.6%,
and 4.9% under the SSP245 Scenario. The yearly generation is expected to rise by 4.1%,
4.6%, and 4.7%, respectively, in the near future, mid-future, and far future, according
to the SSP585 Scenario. The hydropower plant is intended to reach a capacity of 114
GWh at all times in the future.
Description
Hydropower is a clean energy technology for the derivation of electrical energy
from the stream flow. Most of the electrical energy harnessed in Nepal is from
hydropower projects (Singh et. al. 2022). Hydro energy is mainly reliant on the
discharge of the river flow which fluctuates due to the changing climate