The Impact of Climate Change on Swiss Hydropower

Hydropower represents an important pillar of electricity systems in many countries. It not only plays an important role in mitigating climate change, but is also subject to climate-change impacts. In this paper, we use the Swiss electricity market model Swissmod to study the effects of changes in wa...

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Main Authors: Jonas Savelsberg, Moritz Schillinger, Ingmar Schlecht, Hannes Weigt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-07-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/7/2541
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spelling doaj-bf6322724dae4646bd99bdeb48fbd45b2020-11-24T23:06:08ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-07-01107254110.3390/su10072541su10072541The Impact of Climate Change on Swiss HydropowerJonas Savelsberg0Moritz Schillinger1Ingmar Schlecht2Hannes Weigt3Faculty of Business and Economics, FoNEW, SCCER-CREST, University of Basel, Basel 4001, SwitzerlandFaculty of Business and Economics, FoNEW, SCCER-CREST, University of Basel, Basel 4001, SwitzerlandFaculty of Business and Economics, FoNEW, SCCER-CREST, University of Basel, Basel 4001, SwitzerlandFaculty of Business and Economics, FoNEW, SCCER-CREST, University of Basel, Basel 4001, SwitzerlandHydropower represents an important pillar of electricity systems in many countries. It not only plays an important role in mitigating climate change, but is also subject to climate-change impacts. In this paper, we use the Swiss electricity market model Swissmod to study the effects of changes in water availability due to climate change on Swiss hydropower. Swissmod is an electricity dispatch model with a plant-level representation of 96% of Swiss hydropower plants and their interrelations within cascade structures. Using this detailed model in combination with spatially disaggregated climate-change runoff projections for Switzerland, we show that climate change has ambiguous impacts on hydropower and on the overall electricity system. Electricity prices and overall system costs increase under dry conditions and decrease under average or wet conditions. While the change of seasonal patterns, with a shift to higher winter runoff, has positive impacts, the overall yearly inflow varies under hydrological conditions. While average and wet years yield an increase in inflows and revenues, dry years become drier, resulting in the opposite effect. Even though different in magnitude, the direction of impacts persists when applying the same changes in inflows to the 2050 electricity system.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/7/2541hydropowerclimate changeimpact assessmentSwitzerlandelectricitynumerical modeling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jonas Savelsberg
Moritz Schillinger
Ingmar Schlecht
Hannes Weigt
spellingShingle Jonas Savelsberg
Moritz Schillinger
Ingmar Schlecht
Hannes Weigt
The Impact of Climate Change on Swiss Hydropower
Sustainability
hydropower
climate change
impact assessment
Switzerland
electricity
numerical modeling
author_facet Jonas Savelsberg
Moritz Schillinger
Ingmar Schlecht
Hannes Weigt
author_sort Jonas Savelsberg
title The Impact of Climate Change on Swiss Hydropower
title_short The Impact of Climate Change on Swiss Hydropower
title_full The Impact of Climate Change on Swiss Hydropower
title_fullStr The Impact of Climate Change on Swiss Hydropower
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Climate Change on Swiss Hydropower
title_sort impact of climate change on swiss hydropower
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Hydropower represents an important pillar of electricity systems in many countries. It not only plays an important role in mitigating climate change, but is also subject to climate-change impacts. In this paper, we use the Swiss electricity market model Swissmod to study the effects of changes in water availability due to climate change on Swiss hydropower. Swissmod is an electricity dispatch model with a plant-level representation of 96% of Swiss hydropower plants and their interrelations within cascade structures. Using this detailed model in combination with spatially disaggregated climate-change runoff projections for Switzerland, we show that climate change has ambiguous impacts on hydropower and on the overall electricity system. Electricity prices and overall system costs increase under dry conditions and decrease under average or wet conditions. While the change of seasonal patterns, with a shift to higher winter runoff, has positive impacts, the overall yearly inflow varies under hydrological conditions. While average and wet years yield an increase in inflows and revenues, dry years become drier, resulting in the opposite effect. Even though different in magnitude, the direction of impacts persists when applying the same changes in inflows to the 2050 electricity system.
topic hydropower
climate change
impact assessment
Switzerland
electricity
numerical modeling
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/7/2541
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