National Laboratory Researchers Measure Greenhouse Gas Emissions From Hydropower Reservoirs

Researchers used a variety of sampling techniques to consistently and accurately measure methane and carbon emissions from six hydropower reservoirs

Water Power Technologies Office

March 14, 2024
minute read time

Hydropower Program

Environmental and Hydrologic Systems Science

Project Name: Understanding Greenhouse Gas Emissions From U.S. Hydropower Reservoirs

Project Team: Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Lead Recipient Location: Oak Ridge, Tennessee

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Researchers from Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) measured carbon emissions from six hydropower reservoirs in the southeastern United States to better understand the effect of reservoirs with hydropower facilities on greenhouse gas emissions, such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane. The research found that while emissions varied from reservoir to reservoir, many of the bodies of water absorbed more carbon than they emitted during summer, though this can vary both seasonally and across multiple years. 

All bodies of water naturally emit greenhouse gases when microorganisms break down organic matter (such as plants and leaves) into methane or CO2. This happens whether or not hydropower facilities are present on the body of water. To better understand the impacts of hydropower on the environment, data must be collected and compared to the greenhouse gas emissions naturally expected to come from that body of water. Unfortunately, there is not a lot of available data from hydropower reservoirs, and the studies that have been done used different methods or survey designs, measured different emissions pathways, examined different reservoir geographic locations or sizes, and were collected over different periods of time. As a result, the variability in the existing data makes broad-scale comparisons difficult. This makes it hard to determine how much greenhouse gas is actually coming from hydropower reservoirs and how much is attributable to hydropower operations versus other sources and activities.

Four researchers manually collect greenhouse gas emissions in a hydropower reservoir

Researchers at Oak Ridge National Laboratory are aiming to measure multiple different pathways of greenhouse gas emissions, including manual collection through funnels, to ensure as many data points as possible.

Image from Carlos Jones, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

To better understand the uncertainty that these variables contribute and to create consistent measurements across hydropower reservoirs, ORNL researchers collected data from six hydropower reservoirs within the southeastern United States. The team went into the field to manually measure emissions using gas collection funnels and surface domes to collect CO2 and methane emissions. Data were collected during summer 2022, following the same methods as a survey led by ORNL on carbon emissions in these reservoirs from 2012. The data points were then compared to one another and to data measured at the same facilities 10 years prior. Researchers found that most reservoirs were net emitters of carbon in 2012 but net absorbers of carbon in 2022. In one reservoir, high methane bubbling measured in gas collection funnels far outweighed the CO2 sequestration occurring at the surface, making the reservoir a strong emitter of carbon in both 2012 and 2022. 

The team is also comparing their field-based measurements to greenhouse gas emission projections from an International Hydropower Association model, conducting a conceptual analysis of how water levels might influence emissions, and incorporating sensors into reservoir data collection techniques. In pairing this approach with the sampling techniques used at the six hydropower reservoirs, the team is aiming to measure all different pathways of greenhouse gas emissions at a high resolution (hourly to daily to seasonally) to better understand and model those dynamics for hydropower plant operators. ORNL is also working on a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency project to measure greenhouse gases from reservoirs more broadly by taking samples from 108 reservoirs across the country.