1. Evaluation of the possibilities of using water-damming devices on the Tyśmienica River to build small hydropower plants
- Author
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Magdalena Gizińska-Górna, Krzysztof Jóźwiakowski, Aneta Pytka, Alina Kowalczyk-Juśko, Oleksandr Dorozhynskyy, Agnieszka Listosz, Antoni Grzywna, Andrzej Mazur, and Roman Rybicki
- Subjects
Economic efficiency ,Environmental Engineering ,Geography, Planning and Development ,lcsh:River, lake, and water-supply engineering (General) ,Development ,01 natural sciences ,water-damming devices ,alternative energy sources ,03 medical and health sciences ,ecoenergetics ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hydroelectricity ,small hydropower plants ,0103 physical sciences ,Environmental impact assessment ,010306 general physics ,Environmental planning ,Hydropower ,Water Science and Technology ,lcsh:TC401-506 ,Small hydro ,business.industry ,030206 dentistry ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Renewable energy ,hydropower ,Landscape architecture ,Electricity ,business - Abstract
Hydropower plants in Poland currently use only 19% of the river’s energy potential. Development of hydropower is limited by environmental regulations as well as by economic grounds. From the environmental point of view, it is desirable to build small hydropower plants integrated into the local landscape. This paper presents results of the research aimed at estimating the amount of energy that could be produced in the case of small hydroelectric power plants on weirs existing on the Tyśmienica River. There is also a legal framework that should be adapted at hydropower development. It was calculated that the technical capacity of the small hydropower plants that could be built on 4 existing weirs, is 0.131 MW. These power plants could produce 786 MWh of electricity per year. The economic efficiency of this production is currently difficult to assess, because a new support system for renewable energy sources is currently being implemented, which will be a decisive factor for entrepreneurs. It should be borne in mind that potential investments will be made in protected areas within the Natura 2000 network, which may limit their constructing or impose the obligation to assess their impact on selected environmental elements. Location within the protective area does not eliminate such investments, especially when solutions with the least possible environmental impact are used.
- Published
- 2017
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