Back to Blog

Austrian hydropower: Extreme precipitation and flooding in week 32 (updated)

Eylert Ellefsen
Archived blog post. This blog post has been transferred from our previous blogging platform. Links and images may not work as intended.

During Sunday, 2 August and Tuesday 4 August there was an extreme precipitation incident across Austria, and partly Switzerland and Italy too.

Both the hydro reservoir areas in Tirol/Voralpberg and the river areas flowing to Donau were hit hard. The flowrate in Donau, around Vienna, increased from about 1200 m3/s from Sunday up to 6500 m3/s by midday on Wednesday 5 August. The flooding situation is currently retreating, but slower than the rising curve for the first days.

Energy Quantified has studied the hydropower situation during this extreme incident and amongst several factors focused on spilt water and spilt energy.

Precipitation

We have collected some information about precipitation on several key locations in the Austrian hydropower system from Sunday to Tuesday:

Sum precipitation on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, 2-4 August at key locations for the Austrian hydropower system.

Calculated into energy terms, our model show about 2,2 TWh precipitation for these three days (700% of normal, 1.9 TWh above the normal).

The number of 2.2 TWh must be interpreted as a gross number, as the flooding will lead to a lot of water flow beyond the capacity of the hydropower plant, the so-called spillage of water. Thus we have studied the river plant production curves and our energy inflow data to get an impression of the spillage, and then modified our model data for this specific incident.

Inflow and run-river production

The chart below shows the hourly run-of-river production across Austria from Thursday 28 July until Wednesday 5 August. The output rose by about 2000 MW after the weekend and came close to the maximum capacity of 5700 MW. Probably a lot of plants had to reduce their production due to the high flow rates as we usually see in such flooding incidents.

As earlier mentioned the Donau flowrate at Vienna rose from 1200 until 6500 m3/s (hourly max), and a daily average increase of about 5300/1200 = 440%.

In the chart below, we show the modelled inflow curve (gross), which has increased by a factor 300/125 = 240 %, well below the Donau increase of 440%. Statistically, max inflow (net) has been about 215 GWh/day. Thus we modified our inflow calculation as seen in the chart.

Meaning that for week 32, we estimate about 240 GWh (15%) spilt inflow energy in Austria, and we will not see the run-of-river production increase to above 5000 MW.

Our latest reported reservoir filling number for end week 32 is currently 90.3%, up 18.8% from week 31. This number does not take into account an estimated water spillage of 240 GWh. The modified reservoir level is about 5% lower – at an 85.0 % filling rate. That is still a substantial increase of 13% from week 31.

Final words

The hydropower situation in Austria is now at a very high resource level. Production from the reservoirs will most likely have to be increased in the coming weeks to avoid further flooding and uncontrolled production levels. We assume that the run-of-river situation will normalize in a week or two. So far, we haven't seen any effect on the spot market as the German renewables are the main price drivers. However, the strong Austrian hydropower will contribute to slightly lower domestic spot prices.

More from the Blog

COVID-19 cuts Europe’s annual consumption by ≈124 TWh

Eylert Ellefsen
Eylert Ellefsen

European power demand has recovered faster than anticipated as lockdowns have been eased across Europe, but EQ’s latest forecast shows annual demand in 16 western European countries will still drop to around 3% below normal levels.

Read Story

Extreme melting & inflow with a risk of 10 TWh spillage

Eylert Ellefsen
Eylert Ellefsen

EQ hydrology forecasts show inflow to Norwegian reservoirs will average 180% of normal levels over the coming two weeks, as higher temperatures accelerate the spring melt.

Read Story

Update on Nordic hydro: Increased risk for flooding

Eylert Ellefsen
Eylert Ellefsen

The risk for severe flooding and water spillage in the NordPool is on the rise. The reason is that the latest observed temperatures, and forecasted low temperatures, expectedly will further delay the melting process. Inevitably this will shift the melting to occur during periods with higher temperatures than previously expected.

Read Story

Ready to try Energy Quantified?

No payment or credit card required.
Would you rather like a personal demo? Book a demo