Flow alterations caused by hydropower projects in two Mekong tributary basins: the livelihood implications. [Abstract only].

There is increasing concern over projected changes in the magnitude and timing of streamflow due to the construction of hydropower dams in the Mekong basin and elsewhere. We compare a suite of indicators for their ability to reflect changes from pre-dam flow regimes. Using two case studies, we illus...

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Main Authors: Hecht, J., McCartney, Matthew P., Lacombe, Guillaume, Vogel, R.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38334
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author Hecht, J.
McCartney, Matthew P.
Lacombe, Guillaume
Vogel, R.
author_browse Hecht, J.
Lacombe, Guillaume
McCartney, Matthew P.
Vogel, R.
author_facet Hecht, J.
McCartney, Matthew P.
Lacombe, Guillaume
Vogel, R.
author_sort Hecht, J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description There is increasing concern over projected changes in the magnitude and timing of streamflow due to the construction of hydropower dams in the Mekong basin and elsewhere. We compare a suite of indicators for their ability to reflect changes from pre-dam flow regimes. Using two case studies, we illustrate the differences in hydrologic alteration that take place downstream of dams that are used for (i) in-stream power production (Nam Ngum 1 Dam) and (ii) diverting water to off-stream production sites (Nam Theun-Hinboun Project). We show that dams for in-stream power production reduce wet season flows, increase dry season flows and attenuate both high- and low-flow extremes. In contrast, dams constructed for off-stream power production mildly reduce flood peaks when diversions are possible during extreme high flow conditions while dry season streamflow declines sharply due to the priority placed on hydropower production. Our analysis summarizes the effects of dams on the frequency, duration, timing and rates of change of discharge at sites downstream of dams. We then review the relevance of metrics of hydrologic alteration for assessing impacts of hydropower dams on livelihoods dependent upon the natural variability of the flow regime in monsoonal climate zones.
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spelling CGSpace383342025-03-11T09:50:20Z Flow alterations caused by hydropower projects in two Mekong tributary basins: the livelihood implications. [Abstract only]. Hecht, J. McCartney, Matthew P. Lacombe, Guillaume Vogel, R. water power energy generation dams river basins flow discharge case studies living standards There is increasing concern over projected changes in the magnitude and timing of streamflow due to the construction of hydropower dams in the Mekong basin and elsewhere. We compare a suite of indicators for their ability to reflect changes from pre-dam flow regimes. Using two case studies, we illustrate the differences in hydrologic alteration that take place downstream of dams that are used for (i) in-stream power production (Nam Ngum 1 Dam) and (ii) diverting water to off-stream production sites (Nam Theun-Hinboun Project). We show that dams for in-stream power production reduce wet season flows, increase dry season flows and attenuate both high- and low-flow extremes. In contrast, dams constructed for off-stream power production mildly reduce flood peaks when diversions are possible during extreme high flow conditions while dry season streamflow declines sharply due to the priority placed on hydropower production. Our analysis summarizes the effects of dams on the frequency, duration, timing and rates of change of discharge at sites downstream of dams. We then review the relevance of metrics of hydrologic alteration for assessing impacts of hydropower dams on livelihoods dependent upon the natural variability of the flow regime in monsoonal climate zones. 2013 2014-06-13T11:41:24Z 2014-06-13T11:41:24Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38334 en Open Access Hecht, J.; McCartney, Matthew; Lacombe, Guillaume; Vogel, R. 2013. Flow alterations caused by hydropower projects in two Mekong tributary basins: the livelihood implications. [Abstract only]. In German Aerospace Center (DLR); Germany. Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). Mekong Environmental Symposium, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, 5-7 March 2013. Abstract volume, Topic 01 - Hydropower development and impacts on river ecology. Wessling, Germany: German Aerospace Center (DLR); Bonn, Germany: Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). pp.17.
spellingShingle water power
energy generation
dams
river basins
flow discharge
case studies
living standards
Hecht, J.
McCartney, Matthew P.
Lacombe, Guillaume
Vogel, R.
Flow alterations caused by hydropower projects in two Mekong tributary basins: the livelihood implications. [Abstract only].
title Flow alterations caused by hydropower projects in two Mekong tributary basins: the livelihood implications. [Abstract only].
title_full Flow alterations caused by hydropower projects in two Mekong tributary basins: the livelihood implications. [Abstract only].
title_fullStr Flow alterations caused by hydropower projects in two Mekong tributary basins: the livelihood implications. [Abstract only].
title_full_unstemmed Flow alterations caused by hydropower projects in two Mekong tributary basins: the livelihood implications. [Abstract only].
title_short Flow alterations caused by hydropower projects in two Mekong tributary basins: the livelihood implications. [Abstract only].
title_sort flow alterations caused by hydropower projects in two mekong tributary basins the livelihood implications abstract only
topic water power
energy generation
dams
river basins
flow discharge
case studies
living standards
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38334
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AT lacombeguillaume flowalterationscausedbyhydropowerprojectsintwomekongtributarybasinsthelivelihoodimplicationsabstractonly
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