Methane and CO2 emissions from China’s hydroelectric reservoirs: a new quantitative synthesis
2015
Li, Siyue | Zhang, Quanfa | Bush, Richard T. | Sullivan, Leigh A.
Controversy surrounds the green credentials of hydroelectricity because of the potentially large emission of greenhouse gases (GHG) from associated reservoirs. However, limited and patchy data particularly for China is constraining the current global assessment of GHG releases from hydroelectric reservoirs. This study provides the first evaluation of the CO₂and CH₄emissions from China’s hydroelectric reservoirs by considering the reservoir water surface and drawdown areas, and downstream sources (including spillways and turbines, as well as river downstream). The total emission of 29.6 Tg CO₂/year and 0.47 Tg CH₄/year from hydroelectric reservoirs in China, expressed as CO₂equivalents (eq), corresponds to 45.6 Tg CO₂eq/year, which is 2-fold higher than the current GHG emission (ca. 23 Tg CO₂eq/year) from global temperate hydropower reservoirs. China’s average emission of 70 g CO₂eq/kWh from hydropower amounts to 7 % of the emissions from coal-fired plant alternatives. China’s hydroelectric reservoirs thus currently mitigate GHG emission when compared to the main alternative source of electricity with potentially far great reductions in GHG emissions and benefits possible through relatively minor changes to reservoir management and design. On average, the sum of drawdown and downstream emission including river reaches below dams and turbines, which is overlooked by most studies, represents the equivalent of 42 % of the CO₂and 92 % of CH₄that emit from hydroelectric reservoirs in China. Main drivers on GHG emission rates are summarized and highlight that water depth and stratification control CH₄flux, and CO₂flux shows significant negative relationships with pH, DO, and Chl-a. Based on our finding, a substantial revision of the global carbon emissions from hydroelectric reservoirs is warranted.
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