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Community Highlights

These highlights feature efforts by the community that are bringing us closer to a modern vision for hydropower. Interested in featuring your project? Contact the Vision team.
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Improving Fish Passage for Eel, Shad, and Herring

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Advanced Technology
Environmental Performance
Sectors
Government

Improving fish passage is key to supporting certain migratory fish populations and minimizing the environmental impacts of hydropower facilities. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) worked with Duke Energy to implement new fish passage technologies at hydropower facilities in North Carolina, during the relicensing process for the Yadkin-PeeDee Hydroelectric Project. 

The new fish passage options were tailored to support American eel, American shad, and blueback herring—species that have experienced population declines in part due to habitat loss. A custom, stainless-steel eelway was added at Blewett Falls Dam, along with an “attraction flow”—a stream of water containing the scent of eels in the eelway—to draw eels towards the entrance of the passage. To support other fish species, inflatable gates were installed across the dam to better control water spill during fish migratory season and a new notch was cut in the dam to support downstream fish passage. In total, these new fish passage technologies have restored access to over one thousand miles of additional habitat in the watershed for eel, shad, and herring. 

Learn more from NOAA.

Published on December 13, 2024
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Dynamometer
The dynamometer Test Facility at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. (Dennis Schroeder | NREL)

Testing Innovative Hydropower Technologies

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Advanced Technology
Validated Technology
Sectors
DOE/National Labs
Government

Full-scale testing of new hydropower technologies is key to future hydropower innovations, according to research by Oak Ridge National Laboratory. In a report entitled “Needs and Opportunities for Testing of Hydropower Technology Innovations,” the research team highlights the need for hydropower testing facilities that allow full-scale, high hydraulic capacity testing. Such facilities would enable demonstrations of new technologies under realistic operating conditions, lowering the risk for industry adoption. The researchers also identified important characteristics for these testing facilities and some promising pathways to establish such a testing network. 

More information available from Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

Published on March 1, 2024