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CIS ECOSTAT - HYDROMORPHOLGY WORKSHOP 12th and 13th June 2012 - Brussels. Hydropeaking and minimum flow : the French approach. P. Baran. Pôle Ecohydraulique. French context of water storage. Total amount of water per year in stream : 200 billion m3
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CIS ECOSTAT - HYDROMORPHOLGY WORKSHOP 12th and 13th June 2012 - Brussels Hydropeaking and minimum flow : the French approach.P. Baran Pôle Ecohydraulique
French context of water storage • Total amount of water per year in stream : 200 billion m3 • In 2009, 33,4 billion m3 in total collected : • 64% for the production of electricity • 17% for drinking water • 10% for the industry • 9% for irrigation • The water storage has been developed for : • irrigation, • hydropower generation • drinking water • 126 000 samples of water whose 80,000 for agricultural use
French context for hydroelectricity • Production : • Between 60 to 70 TWh for hydroelectricity (550 TWh of total production), • 50% of the production by hydropower plants managed by hydropeak with to type of schemes : • organized in line (eg: Durance, Dordogne, Truyère). • organized with high-head storage (Alpine and Pyrenean mountains)
French approach • Identification and quantification of changes of flow regime with two priorities : • Low flow • Hydropeaking • Mitigation measures to increase low flow value (large scale (2014)) and/or to change locally the hydropeaking management.
Principales centrales hydrauliques Focus on hydropeaking • More than 150 hydroelectric schemes managed by hydropeaking in France. • ≈ 3000 kms of streams concerned by hydropeaking.
The French approach • 1. Identifications of flow modifications induced by hydropeaking Analysis of flow regime 7
The French approach • 2. Identifications of habitat alterations related to the flow modifications induced by hydropeaking Characterization of fish habitats by hydraulic models and habitat preference curves of species and life-stages 8
The French approach • 3. Proposal of mitigation measures and assessment Approach based on hydraulic models and habitat mapping 9
Method to characterize the hydrological disturbance • Data base : gauging stations • Hourly flow analysis • Identification of each flow variations • Differentiation between the hydropeak and natural variations
Method to characterize the hydrological disturbance • number of hydropeaks, • Each hydropeak is characterized by : • base flow, • maximum flow, • range, • rate of change,
Method to characterize the hydrological disturbance • For each year : • Number of hydropeaks • Statistical characteristics of : • base flow, • maximum flow, • range, • rate of change, Number of hydropeaks Rate of change Base flow Range
Daily hydropeaks Hourly hydropeaks Weekly hydropeaks
Characterization of hydrologic perturbation: • Construction underway of an indicator of hydrologic perturbation due to hydropeaking events. • Based on discriminant analysis : • base flow, • maximum flow, • range, • rate of change, • number of hydropeaks
Saint-Béat - 2006 Characterization of hydrologic perturbation: • The index just evaluate the hydrological perturbations and not ecological effects • The index allow to analyse the evolution of the perturbation along a stream or between years. Chaum - 2006 Upstream Valentine - 2006 Downstream
Global situation in France: • 80 stations were analysed in 50 french streams. 58% of stations with strong alterations of flow regime
Two types of impacts on fish habitat depending on morphology of stream. Impacts on fish habitat Mountain steep stream : hydraulic conditions during high flow
Effects of hydropeaking management during life-stages of fish Impacts on fish habitat Lez river (MD : 1 m3/s) Hydrologic perturbation very marked, maximum discharge 4 m3/s (≈4 times MD), between 150 and 300 hydropeaks per year.
Two types of impacts on fish habitat depending on morphology of stream. Impacts on fish habitat Braided streams : Hourly variations on wetted perimeter dewatering fish habitats on shallow shoreline areas and trapping fry in disconnected secondary channels
Impacts on fish habitat • Monitoring two streams (MD :107 m3/s; MD : 20 m3/s) Line of lakes and hydropower plants Hydrologic perturbation very marked, maximum discharge 35 m3/s (≈1,8 times MD), between 150 and 300 hydropeaks per year. Hydrologic perturbation marked or very marked, maximum discharge 340 m3/s (≈3.2 times MD), between 100 and 240 hydropeaks per year.
Impacts on fish habitat • Monitoring ecological effecfs of hydropeaks • Dewatering of salmonid redds and mortality of eggs (30% of the total redds). • Trapping of fry in disconnected secondary channels and mortality (6000 fry/year on 6 kms of stream). Back to base flow During a hydropeak
Mitigation measures • Two types : • Changes on hydropeaking management : • Number of hydropeaks during specific biological periods, • Base flow, range, maximum flow, rate of change • Changes on stream morphology : • Connectivity of secondary channels, • River banks • Topography of gravel bar
Mitigation measures • Base flow increased : • from 0.5 m3/s to and 4 m3/s (5-20% of MD) in winter and spring, 1 m3/s the rest of the year • From 10 m3/s to 30 m3/s (28% of MD) in winter and spring (15/11-15/06), 10 m3/s the rest of the year. • Maximum discharge limited : • to 35 m3/s (less than 2 times MD), if possible, in spring (15/03-15/06). • to 190 m3/s (less than 2 times MD), if possible, in spring (15/03-15/06). • Discharge downramping rate of change limited : • to 20 m3/s/h in spring (15/03-15/06). • to 30 m3/s/h all year round. • Work on morphology to ensure permanent supply of secondary channels.
Mitigation measures • Efficiency: • Only ≈ 5% salmonid redds dewatered, instead of 30% without base flow increase. • Significant decrease of fry mortality in connected secondary channels.
Effects on electricity production • There were compensations for the losses of electricity production. In general, losses of production varied between 0,5 % to 2% of the total potential of peak production. • They remained quite limited because of the line organization. Only the production of the last hydropower plant is really affected. • All decisions of flow changes were made in consultation with the electricity company
Evolution of low flow • Analysis of the evolution of low flow at large scale during the 3 last decades (Guintoli and Renard, 2010). • Volume • Duration • Time (begining and end)
Evolution of low flow • Significant evolution of low flow conditions.
Fish communities and low flow Changes in fish communities in relation to low flow conditions
French approach • The French Water Law impose minimum values of flow : • 5% to 10% of mean annual flow in 2014 for all dams and weirs • Locally, for each dams or weirs, the value of minimum flow can be increased based on study using microhabitat methodology.
Conclusions • Modifications of flow regime are very important in France for a large part of water bodies. • A focus was made on hydroelectricity use with : • an evaluation at large scale for hydropeaking effects on flow regime, • the definition of mitigation measures at small scale • No direct relationships were established with biological index related to ecological status assessment of water bodies.