“In Europe, the documented environmental effects of such schemes and recognition that most opportunities for economic and politically-acceptable large schemes have already been developed, has turned development attention to smaller designs, particularly run-of-river schemes.”
According to Dr Bilotta ‘run-of-river’ hydroelectric power schemes operate without water storage, using river flow. Channel structures, typically pre-existing weirs, are normally used to regulate water levels, allowing a proportion of flow to be diverted through a turbine before returning it to the river downstream.
“It has been shown that these types of hydroelectric power schemes consume less water per unit of electricity generated compared to other sources of energy, and that they have significantly lower greenhouse gas emissions than other sources of energy, but until our research published this week, their physical and ecological impacts had not been well studied.”