Abstract

We investigated the potential impacts on hydropower generation of applying six Colombian and two international best practice environmental flow methodologies within a small Andean river catchment, the Chinchiná River basin. Post-impact flow and hydropower production levels under the eight methodologies and a “no environmental flow scenario” were determined using a Microsoft Excel® flow diversion and hydropower production spreadsheet model. A flow regime alteration index (FRAI) was developed based on the degree of variation between the pre- and post-impact flow conditions of the 33 characteristic Indicators of Hydrologic Alteration flow regime parameters, facilitating a simplified comparison of the overall degree of alteration among the nine different environmental flow scenarios. Hydropower production decreased with increasing levels of environmental flow releases, with decreases of 16.9–76.4% relative to production levels in the absence of an environmental flow. None of the eight investigated methodologies maintained “sustainable” (<20%) levels of flow regime alteration while facilitating minimal reductions in hydropower generation. Methodologies which maintained sustainable flow regime alteration levels resulted in >50% decrease in hydropower production and >40% decrease in flow diversion capacity. We recommend a dual approach of hydropower re-operation and fine-tuning of existing national standards to consider the characteristic inter- and intra-annual seasonality and ecologically relevant flow events, maximizing benefits between power generation and environmental sustainability. Our findings are relevant to the Chinchiná River basin and regions of similar hydro-geographical conditions utilized for small scale hydropower production, and underscore the need for further development of existing environmental flow methodologies.

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