Originally Posted By: Kuato
Hydro I'm talking about is not a dammed river like the Hoover Dam or something, but rather a custom-built system using a reservoir as a battery. The same water can be used over and over again in this system, adding to it as necessary. Water flows downhill when power is needed (some in use in Australia provide power for 4 hours IIRC), then is pumped back up "recharging the battery" when there is excess electricity. The whole idea is to get the generation curve to match the demand curve.
It's a small (note I didn't say tiny) part of the Australian Hydro scene.
I've been offered jobs, and also worked at some of them, and the nett flow is nearly always downhill...Tumut, the number of pumps is not the number of turbines, the nett flow is down, there is some pump storage, and they use it.
Kangaroo Valley/Bendeela there's two different sized power stations operating at different heights, with a "pond" in the middle, that provides some pump storage...yes, for some hours, but 35-50MW in a grid of 12,000MW peak demand is there, but not big.
During the drought, THAT power station was turned into a plain jane pump, to keep water flowing to Sydney, we evaporated water in the thermals to make electricity to keep Sydney drinking.
(Gil Gerard was "star" of a movie at those two hydros...Earth Force...it's a hoot).
The whole system has been privatised now, so opportunities for engineering solutions such as you offer here are restricted to price and demand...the coalers have cut their overnight minimum loads, which is resulting in less, and less cheap overnight electricity to pump storages up...hydros pull capacity to bump up peak prices.
The strategically located coastal sites that would be purely pump storage for a few hours are a great idea, but would never get approvals in the current state of Oz.
Crazy case in a neighbouring city, where certain groups lobbied hard against treated sewage returning to the river. Now a local (gold) mine wants the water, and the same people are arguing that to do so would reduce the flow in the river and damage the ecosystem