News Brief

New Hydroelectric Turbine May Kill Fewer Fish

By Evan DickThe Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) has received $1.5 million from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to field-test a new hydroelectric turbine developed by research engineers at Alden Research Laboratory. The turbine is designed to maximize the use of hydroelectric resources without further jeopardizing migrating fish populations.

Preliminary testing indicates that the Alden turbine can maintain high efficiencies while allowing fish migrating downstream to pass with a 98% survival rate; upstream migration issues must be addressed separately with other mechanisms, such as fish ladders.

Instead of the six or more blades common in older turbine designs, the Alden turbine has only three blades, reducing the chance that fish will be struck by a blade. The blades also have a semi-round edge, which pushes enough water in front of the spinning blades to move the fish out of their path.

The three-blade Alden hydroelectric turbine achieves high generation efficiency while allowing fish to pass through unscathed.

Photo: Voith Hydro
If the Alden turbine proves successful in field tests, it could open the door to maximizing the use of hydropower resources currently being lost to dam spillover and through-fish bypasses meant to protect migrating fish populations. Researchers estimate domestic hydropower capacity lost to fish protection measures to be as much as 25,000 megawatts.

Published October 5, 2011

Dick, E. (2011, October 5). New Hydroelectric Turbine May Kill Fewer Fish. Retrieved from https://www.buildinggreen.com/newsbrief/new-hydroelectric-turbine-may-kill-fewer-fish

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