Hydro-Power generates electricity by using water and it is one of the cheapest and eco-friendly ways, especially small hydro power plants. It exploits the vast global water cycle: the water constantly evaporates from lakes and oceans, forming clouds, precipitating as rain or snow, and then flowing back down to the oceans. In this way it is possible to use water’s potential energy in its natural flow to produce power. The water cycle is an endless, constantly recharging system, and therefore hydro power is considered a renewable energy. As stated by International Energy Agency (IEA) in 2008, the total installed capacity of hydro power is about 850GW, and hydro sources produce about 3000TWh of electricity annually, supplying about 15% of total world’s electricity. The IEA projects that hydro will grow up to 63% for the period 2002-2030. The agency predicts that new hydro plants will continue to be built, not at a rate high enough to maintain hydro’s current percentage of total electricity generation. As a result, hydro power is projected to fall to 13% by 2030, from the present 15%. It is estimated that two-thirds of the world’s economically feasible potential is still to be exploited and it is mainly concentrated in developing countries such as Africa, Asia and South America. China is using only about one-quarter of its huge hydro potential of 450GW, and it is the main developer to hydro technology today. Chinas government figures suggest that it will add more than 12GW of new capacity each year until 2020 to reach 300GW. This paper highlights the basics of different hydro technologies, with a special focus on small hydro run-of-river plants
Alternative Energy Sources: Hydropower / Micangeli, Andrea; Evangelisti, Sara; Sbordone, DANILO ANTONO. - STAMPA. - -(In corso di stampa), pp. ---.
Alternative Energy Sources: Hydropower
MICANGELI, Andrea;EVANGELISTI, SARA;SBORDONE , DANILO ANTONO
In corso di stampa
Abstract
Hydro-Power generates electricity by using water and it is one of the cheapest and eco-friendly ways, especially small hydro power plants. It exploits the vast global water cycle: the water constantly evaporates from lakes and oceans, forming clouds, precipitating as rain or snow, and then flowing back down to the oceans. In this way it is possible to use water’s potential energy in its natural flow to produce power. The water cycle is an endless, constantly recharging system, and therefore hydro power is considered a renewable energy. As stated by International Energy Agency (IEA) in 2008, the total installed capacity of hydro power is about 850GW, and hydro sources produce about 3000TWh of electricity annually, supplying about 15% of total world’s electricity. The IEA projects that hydro will grow up to 63% for the period 2002-2030. The agency predicts that new hydro plants will continue to be built, not at a rate high enough to maintain hydro’s current percentage of total electricity generation. As a result, hydro power is projected to fall to 13% by 2030, from the present 15%. It is estimated that two-thirds of the world’s economically feasible potential is still to be exploited and it is mainly concentrated in developing countries such as Africa, Asia and South America. China is using only about one-quarter of its huge hydro potential of 450GW, and it is the main developer to hydro technology today. Chinas government figures suggest that it will add more than 12GW of new capacity each year until 2020 to reach 300GW. This paper highlights the basics of different hydro technologies, with a special focus on small hydro run-of-river plantsI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.