Fish downstream passage at hydropower plants remains a relatively unresolved environmental issue. A number of
investigations have shown, that fish injury and mortality due to turbine passage can have significant magnitude and
respective ecological impact. Actual values depend largely on the underlying facility and fish population. While
remarkable scientific progress has been achieved during the last decades, a broad application of this knowledge has
not emerged yet.
The EU-Horizon 2020 project FIThydro, addresses the decision support in commissioning and operating hydropower
plants (HPP) by use of existing and innovative technologies. It concentrates on mitigation measures and strategies to
develop cost-efficient environmental solutions and on strategies to avoid individual fish damage and enhancing
population developments. Consequently, fish turbine passage issues are considered beside other aspects. The
respective work focuses on the assessment of damage rates and moreover on their mitigation.
Broad literature research provided a variety of approaches to assess fish damage due to turbine passage on
experimental, empirical or theoretical based methods. The individual applicability and suitability have been
benchmarked. Equally, the research results provide insight to particular fish passage aspects of different turbine
types. Beside classical designs, this also accounts for innovative schemes and especially those seeking favourable
fish passage conditions. Diverging existing modelling approaches for damage rates during turbine passage have been
analysed in detail, to clarify differences and correctness.
Based on the literature research and analytical and statistical modelling, a generalized modelling of fish damage due
to turbine passage could be deduced. The model allows for consideration of detailed fish passage conditions, e.g.
with regard to fish comportment as well as turbine service condition. Recent research findings for fish stress
response to respective load have been included. Model development was facilitated by vast numerical modelling of
turbine passage conditions by project partners, which moreover developed an CFD based fish stress assessment
capable of taking into account detailed hydrodynamic conditions. Moreover, project partners conducted sensor fish
passage investigations at several hydropower plants to provide a comprehensive set of experimental data for model
development and evaluation.
The enhanced modelling can provide improved fish damage assessment. Furthermore, the better understanding of
fish damage sources allows for targeted mitigation measures with regard to turbine design and service. A number of
experimental investigations, including live fish behaviour studies, were conducted to clarify the influence of fish comportment during turbine passage on the resulting damage rates. These works also emerged the development of an
innovative technology, which intends to reduce fish damage during turbine passage by the manipulation of fish
comportment. This could provide an especially cost-efficient solution to achieve ecologically compatible fish
passage conditions.
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Fish downstream passage at hydropower plants remains a relatively unresolved environmental issue. A number of
investigations have shown, that fish injury and mortality due to turbine passage can have significant magnitude and
respective ecological impact. Actual values depend largely on the underlying facility and fish population. While
remarkable scientific progress has been achieved during the last decades, a broad application of this knowledge has
not emerged yet.
The EU-Horizon 2020 pro...
»