Pumped Storage Hydropower for Sustainable and Low-Carbon Electricity Grids in Pacific Rim Economies
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (i)
- Geographically spreading VRE generators (such as by spacing solar arrays in an east–west direction means that when night has fallen on arrays further to the east, the arrays further west can still produce power).
- (ii)
- Implementing policies that encourage consumers to use electricity when weather conditions are favorable for generation (e.g., adjusting tariffs based on time of day).
- (iii)
- Selecting a range of VRE generators (e.g., in some locations. wind may generally be prevalent at night when solar generators do not generate power).
- (iv)
- Importing electricity from neighboring grids when demand is high.
- (v)
- Employing smart-grid capabilities (e.g., technologies that allow electricity to be drawn from parked electrical vehicles to meet spot demands).
2. Methods
- (i)
- Renewable energy policies and policy trends.
- (ii)
- Existing and planned electrical energy storage.
- (iii)
- Existing and planned PSH.
- (iv)
- Dispatchable power generation capacity.
3. Theory
3.1. Overview of Electrical Energy Storage Technologies
3.1.1. Different EES Technologies and Their Characteristics
- (i)
- Have storage capacity flexibility through adjustments to the size of the upper reservoir.
- (ii)
- Have a long operational life-span of up to at least 80 years [28].
- (iii)
- Supply low-cost electricity [16].
- (iv)
- (v)
- Can have low (or positive) social and environmental impacts (e.g., through re-purposing brownfield sites [30]).
- (vi)
- Can be located to use the sea or ocean as the lower reservoir [31].
- (vii)
- (viii)
- Involve a high proportion of local expenditure for development, thus enhancing local socio-economic benefits [17].
- (ix)
- Have effectively unlimited charge–discharge cycles (assuming appropriate maintenance/refurbishment).
- (x)
- The decommissioning of PSH is well-understood and does not require dealing with environmentally damaging materials.
3.1.2. The Need for Sustainable Development Trajectories in Southeast Asia
3.2. Pumped Storage Hydropower
3.2.1. What Is Pumped Storage Hydropower?
- Linked to a water source (e.g., a lake, river, sub-surface water, or the ocean) that provides sufficient water for moving between the reservoirs.
- Connected to an electricity grid.
- Located where the two reservoirs have a sufficient height difference so that falling water can drive the turbines.
3.2.2. Pumped Storage Hydropower and Sustainability
- Dam construction.
- Road construction.
- Human presence (e.g., accommodation and sanitation facilities for workforce).
- Vegetation clearing.
- Construction of transmission lines.
- Spoil disposal (e.g., linked to reservoir works, tunnel construction).
- Land inundation.
- Facilitating access for invasive species.
4. Results
5. Discussion
5.1. PSH Potential in APEC +3 Economies
5.2. Regulatory Frameworks for Encouraging Investment in PSH
- (i)
- Lease their PSH facility to a utility to provide a known income stream.
- (ii)
- Invest in complimentary shorter-term income-generating investments (e.g., solar farms) alongside their PSH development.
- (i)
- Rapidly respond to demand changes (e.g., when another generator goes offline without warning).
- (ii)
- Stabilize the voltage, current, and frequency of electricity in the grid.
- (iii)
- Begin providing electricity when an entire electricity grid is blacked out.
- (iv)
- Fill a supply gap when VRE generators produce less than forecast.
- (v)
- Store VRE produced electricity so it can be supplied to consumers at times of high demand.
5.3. PSH Evaluation and Sustainability
- (i)
- Commercial viability.
- (ii)
- Environmental impacts.
- (iii)
- Social impacts.
- (iv)
- The role PSH projects will play in the grid (see Section 5.2).
6. Conclusions and Recommendations
- Be limited to sites with minimal or positive social and environmental impacts. For example, the re-development of brownfield sites (e.g., decommissioned mines) has the potential to create positive environmental and social effects.
- Prioritize off-river closed-loop developments, as these developments tend to have the lowest impacts on natural hydrology.
- Link, where feasible, to renewable energy generation projects, which could take the form of floating solar arrays or nearby wind or solar farms. Hybrid projects such as these allow for any excess renewably generated electricity to be stored and used and times of high demand.
- Avoid tropical sites where significant quantities of vegetation may be inundated or where there is likely to be significant inflows of organic matter in order to limit greenhouse gas emissions.
- Consider options to improve environmental performance where the PSH development will involve retro-fitting existing on-river infrastructure.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
APEC | Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation |
CAES | Compressed-Air Energy Storage |
CIS | Commonwealth of Independent States |
EES | Electrical Energy Storage |
GHG | Greenhouse gas |
GW | Gigawatt |
GWh | Gigawatt Hours |
Hong Kong SAR | Hong Kong Special Administrative Region |
HVDC | High Voltage Direct Current |
IFC | International Finance Corporation |
Lao PDR | Lao People’s Democratic Republic |
LCOE | Levelized Cost of Energy |
PRC | People’s Republic of China |
PSH | Pumped Storage Hydropower |
ROK | Republic of Korea |
RPS | Renewable Portfolio Standards |
VRE | Variable Renewable Energy |
VRFB | Vanadium Redox Flow Battery |
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ECONOMY | Current Renewable Energy Generation ǂ | Renewable Energy Target | Energy Storage Existence (Yes/No) | Energy Storage Planned (Yes/No) | Grid Reliability Issues (Yes/No) | Cross-Border Electricity Transmission Grids (Yes/No/Planned) | Existing PSH Capacity (GW) | Planned PSH (Yes/No) # | Potential PSH * (No. of Sites) | Potential PSH * (GWh) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
TOTAL | PERCENTAGE | ||||||||||
Australia | 40,927 GWh (2019) | 18% of generation | 33,000 GWh by 2030 | Yes | Yes | Lack of investment in flexible electricity generation | Planned—Singapore | 2.5 | yes | 3996 | 176,506 |
Brunei Darussalam | 1.2 MW (2019) | 0.08% of capacity | 30% by 2035 | No | No | No | Planned—Malaysia and the Philippines | - | no evidence | nil | nil |
Cambodia | 155 MW (2019) | ~9% of capacity | 415 MW by 2022 | No | Yes | Yes | Yes—Lao PDR, Thailand, Viet Nam | - | no evidence | 190 | 8005 |
Canada | 20 GW (2018) | 7.2% of capacity | No data | Yes | Yes | No | Yes—United States | 2 | yes | 23,427 | 869,828 |
Chile | 5.8 GW (2018) | 24% of capacity | 60% by 2035 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes—Argentina; | - | yes | 11,780 | 456,939 |
Planned—Andean economies | |||||||||||
Chinese Taipei | 2.5 GW (2015) | 1.7% of capacity | 20% by 2025 | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 0.0026 | no evidence | 550 | 9248 |
Hong Kong, China | 52 MW (2017) | 0.42% of capacity | N/A | Yes | No | No | Yes—China | 0.6005 ^ | no evidence | nil | nil |
Indonesia | 9 GW (2017) | 14.5% of capacity | 45 GW by 2025 | No | No | Yes | Planned—Malaysia | - | no evidence | 26,025 | 821,351 |
Japan | ~181,300 GWh (2017) | 18% of generation | 24% of generation by 2030 | Yes | Yes | No | No | 27 | no evidence | 2413 | 52,657 |
Lao PDR | 41 MW (2016) | 0.656% of capacity | 951 MW by 2025 | No | No | Yes | Yes—Cambodia, Myanmar, People’s Republic of China, Thailand, Viet Nam | - | no evidence | 5605 | 188,156 |
Malaysia | 0.57 GW (2016) | 23% of capacity | 31% by 2025 | Yes | Yes | No | Yes—Thailand, Indonesia and Singapore | - | no evidence | 3756 | 119,842 |
40% by 2050 | |||||||||||
Mexico | 22,543 GWh (2018) | 6.7% of generation | 40% of generation by 2036 | No | No | No data | Yes—United States | - | no evidence | 30,838 | 1,071,158 |
Myanmar | 173 MW (2019) | 3% of capacity | 12% by 2025 | No | Yes | Yes | Yes—Lao PDR and possibly Thailand | - | no evidence | 13,163 | 435,176 |
New Zealand | ~10,300 GWh (2017) | 24% of generation | 100% (including hydropower) by 2030 | Yes | Yes | Possible | No | - | no evidence | 1356 | 40,486 |
Papua New Guinea | 0.075 GW (2018) | 8.6% of capacity | 100% (including hydropower) by 2030 | No | No | Yes | No | - | no evidence | 13,556 | 391,848 |
People’s Republic of China | 415 GW (2019) | 21% of capacity | 35% of generation by 2030 | Yes | Yes | Possible | Yes—Hong Kong SAR, Myanmar, Lao PDR, Vietnam, and Russia | 30 | yes | 115,871 | 3,766,868 |
Planned—ROK | |||||||||||
Peru | 2252 GWh (2018) | 4.1% of generation | 5% of generation by 2013 | No | No | No data | Yes—Ecuador | 4.7 | no evidence | 1045 | 36,479 |
Republic of Korea | ~6 GW, including hydropower (2019) | 5% of generation | 20% by 2030 | No | No | No | Planned—HVDC link to China | - | no evidence | 18,892 | 552,555 |
Russia | 3 GW (2020) | 1.2% of capacity | 4.5% of generation by 2030 | Under construction | Yes | Yes | Yes—CIS † economies, Finland, Lithuania, China and Mongolia | 1.3 | no evidence | 20,168 | 871,802 |
Singapore | ~160 MW (2018) | 0.18% of capacity | 8% of generation by 2030 | Under construction | Yes | No | Yes—Malaysia Planned—Australia | - | no evidence | Nil | nil |
Thailand | 21,402 GWh (2019) | 10.1% of generation | 20.77 GW by 2037 (26.9%) | Yes | Yes | None evident | Yes—Lao PDR, Cambodia, Myanmar, Malaysia | 1 | yes | 2120 | 62,590 |
The Philippines | 13,578 GWh (2018) | 14.4% of generation | 15 GW by 2030 | Yes | Yes | Likely | Planned—Malaysia | - | yes | 5311 | 160,911 |
United States | 2.5 million GWh (2019) | 8.6% of generation | State by state basis | Yes | Yes | No | Yes—Canada, Mexico | 22.9 | no evidence | 34,820 | 1,415,472 |
Viet Nam | No data | No data | 12.5% by 2025 | No | Yes | Yes | Yes—Lao PDR | - | yes | 6233 | 202,518 |
21% by 2030 |
No. | Project Name | Description |
---|---|---|
1 | Platzertal extension to Gepatsch hydropower facility, Austria | Status: Planned. Impacts: Will flood a pristine alpine river valley that is home to protected meadows and grasslands, as well as animals such as alpine marmots, which are under threat because of loss of habitat. |
2 | Snowy 2.0 scheme, Australia | Status: Under construction. Impacts: Is likely to transfer invasive predatory fish and a virus and negatively impact at least two threatened fish species. Clearing of a transmission line easement is also expected to create large environmental impacts. |
3 | Lamtakong PSH facility, Thailand | Status: Completed December 2019 Impacts: The PSH facility is an add-on to an existing irrigation reservoir. The new reservoir is a turkey’s nest dam on a hill-top, and the system is linked to VRE generators. The water regime will not be significantly affected. |
4 | Lake Cethana, Australia | Status: Scoping to investment-ready stage Impacts: Upper reservoir will be less than 5% of the volume of the existing lower reservoir, so there is unlikely to be any significant impact on water quality, volumes, or freshwater biodiversity. The biodiversity value of the new upper reservoir site has not yet been publicly assessed, but the site is not located in a protected area. |
5 | Kidston PSH facility, Australia | Status: Under construction Impacts: Being developed on a decommissioned mine site, the environmental impacts of concern relate to water discharges following large rainfall events. These impacts are easily managed, and the project is creating jobs, reducing dependency on fossil-fuel generators, and will continue to maintain and improve the degraded mine area. |
6 | Čapljina PSH facility, Bosnia and Herzegovina | Status: Completed 1979 Impacts: This project is located in an area characterized by complex and poorly understood underground water flows. The project has reduced water flows into the Hutovo wetlands and significantly disturbed the flows in the Trebišnjica river that is linked to the upper reservoir. |
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Gilfillan, D.; Pittock, J. Pumped Storage Hydropower for Sustainable and Low-Carbon Electricity Grids in Pacific Rim Economies. Energies 2022, 15, 3139. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15093139
Gilfillan D, Pittock J. Pumped Storage Hydropower for Sustainable and Low-Carbon Electricity Grids in Pacific Rim Economies. Energies. 2022; 15(9):3139. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15093139
Chicago/Turabian StyleGilfillan, Daniel, and Jamie Pittock. 2022. "Pumped Storage Hydropower for Sustainable and Low-Carbon Electricity Grids in Pacific Rim Economies" Energies 15, no. 9: 3139. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15093139
APA StyleGilfillan, D., & Pittock, J. (2022). Pumped Storage Hydropower for Sustainable and Low-Carbon Electricity Grids in Pacific Rim Economies. Energies, 15(9), 3139. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15093139