Spatially distributed freshwater demand for electricity in Africa

Although energy requires large amounts of water for its production, (inter)national statistics or reports on water demand for electricity for the African continent are scarce. Here we provide the spatially most detailed analysis presently available on freshwater demand for electricity for the recent...

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Autores principales: Gerbens-Leenes, P. W., Vaca-Jiménez, S. D., Holmatov, Bunyod, Vanham, Davy
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Royal Society of Chemistry 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/148672
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author Gerbens-Leenes, P. W.
Vaca-Jiménez, S. D.
Holmatov, Bunyod
Vanham, Davy
author_browse Gerbens-Leenes, P. W.
Holmatov, Bunyod
Vaca-Jiménez, S. D.
Vanham, Davy
author_facet Gerbens-Leenes, P. W.
Vaca-Jiménez, S. D.
Holmatov, Bunyod
Vanham, Davy
author_sort Gerbens-Leenes, P. W.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Although energy requires large amounts of water for its production, (inter)national statistics or reports on water demand for electricity for the African continent are scarce. Here we provide the spatially most detailed analysis presently available on freshwater demand for electricity for the recent year 2020, covering the whole of Africa. We conduct a major data mining effort using only freely accessible data. This results in 2534 individual power plants, including 1447 fossil (coal, oil and natural gas), 1071 renewable (wind, sun, biomass, geothermal and hydropower with the distinction between reservoir and run-of-river or ROR hydropower) and 16 other (waste heat and nuclear) power plants. We categorized the power plants according to applied fuel, operation cycle, infrastructure, cooling system and local climate. The total water withdrawal (WW) and consumption (WC) amount to 33 108 and 23 822 million m3 per year (Mm3 per year) respectively, for an annual electricity production of 1 050 674 GWh. Hydropower and natural gas, which have high water withdrawal intensities relative to other energy sources such as wind or sun, account for the largest fractions (70% and 27%, respectively) of total water withdrawal. Our database can be used at any spatial level, as we show results on the national, subnational and river basin level. Countries with high annual WW amounts include Egypt (8937 Mm3 ), Ghana (7893 Mm3 ), Zambia (5262 Mm3 ), Mozambique (2602 Mm3 ), Nigeria (2309 Mm3 ) and South Africa (1068 Mm3 ). River basins with high WW amounts include the Nile (10 377 Mm3 ), the Volta (7765 Mm3 ), the Zambezi (7596 Mm3 ) and the Niger (2562 Mm3 ) river basins. In major river basins, these WW amounts do not exceed 10% of renewable water availability, except for the Volta basin, where the value is 43%. By providing all results in a fully open-access database, we provide valuable statistics for any water management or energy stakeholder working in or on Africa.
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spelling CGSpace1486722025-10-26T12:52:46Z Spatially distributed freshwater demand for electricity in Africa Gerbens-Leenes, P. W. Vaca-Jiménez, S. D. Holmatov, Bunyod Vanham, Davy freshwater water demand electricity generation hydropower power plants spatial distribution energy sources fossil fuels renewable energy water use water extraction water availability databases Although energy requires large amounts of water for its production, (inter)national statistics or reports on water demand for electricity for the African continent are scarce. Here we provide the spatially most detailed analysis presently available on freshwater demand for electricity for the recent year 2020, covering the whole of Africa. We conduct a major data mining effort using only freely accessible data. This results in 2534 individual power plants, including 1447 fossil (coal, oil and natural gas), 1071 renewable (wind, sun, biomass, geothermal and hydropower with the distinction between reservoir and run-of-river or ROR hydropower) and 16 other (waste heat and nuclear) power plants. We categorized the power plants according to applied fuel, operation cycle, infrastructure, cooling system and local climate. The total water withdrawal (WW) and consumption (WC) amount to 33 108 and 23 822 million m3 per year (Mm3 per year) respectively, for an annual electricity production of 1 050 674 GWh. Hydropower and natural gas, which have high water withdrawal intensities relative to other energy sources such as wind or sun, account for the largest fractions (70% and 27%, respectively) of total water withdrawal. Our database can be used at any spatial level, as we show results on the national, subnational and river basin level. Countries with high annual WW amounts include Egypt (8937 Mm3 ), Ghana (7893 Mm3 ), Zambia (5262 Mm3 ), Mozambique (2602 Mm3 ), Nigeria (2309 Mm3 ) and South Africa (1068 Mm3 ). River basins with high WW amounts include the Nile (10 377 Mm3 ), the Volta (7765 Mm3 ), the Zambezi (7596 Mm3 ) and the Niger (2562 Mm3 ) river basins. In major river basins, these WW amounts do not exceed 10% of renewable water availability, except for the Volta basin, where the value is 43%. By providing all results in a fully open-access database, we provide valuable statistics for any water management or energy stakeholder working in or on Africa. 2024-05-31 2024-06-24T06:04:35Z 2024-06-24T06:04:35Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/148672 en Open Access Royal Society of Chemistry Gerbens-Leenes, P. W.; Vaca-Jiménez, S. D.; Holmatov, Bunyod; Vanham, Davy. 2024. Spatially distributed freshwater demand for electricity in Africa. Environmental Science: Water Research and Technology, 14p. (Online first) [doi: https://doi.org/10.1039/D4EW00246F]
spellingShingle freshwater
water demand
electricity generation
hydropower
power plants
spatial distribution
energy sources
fossil fuels
renewable energy
water use
water extraction
water availability
databases
Gerbens-Leenes, P. W.
Vaca-Jiménez, S. D.
Holmatov, Bunyod
Vanham, Davy
Spatially distributed freshwater demand for electricity in Africa
title Spatially distributed freshwater demand for electricity in Africa
title_full Spatially distributed freshwater demand for electricity in Africa
title_fullStr Spatially distributed freshwater demand for electricity in Africa
title_full_unstemmed Spatially distributed freshwater demand for electricity in Africa
title_short Spatially distributed freshwater demand for electricity in Africa
title_sort spatially distributed freshwater demand for electricity in africa
topic freshwater
water demand
electricity generation
hydropower
power plants
spatial distribution
energy sources
fossil fuels
renewable energy
water use
water extraction
water availability
databases
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/148672
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