EGU2020-896
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-896
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Real-Time Reservoir Operation by Tree-Based Model Predictive Control Including Forecast Uncertainty

Gokcen Uysal1, Rodolfo-Alvarado Montero2, Dirk Schwanenberg3, and Aynur Sensoy1
Gokcen Uysal et al.
  • 1Eskisehir Technical University, Department of Civil Engineering, Eskişehir, Turkey (gokcenuysal@eskisehir.edu.tr)
  • 2Deltares, Operational Water Management, Delft, The Netherlands
  • 3KISTERS AG, 52076 Aachen, Germany

Streamflow forecasts include uncertainties related with initial conditions, model forcings, hydrological model structure and parameters. Ensemble streamflow forecasts can capture forecast uncertainties by having spread forecast members. Integration of these forecast members into real-time operational decision models which deals with different objectives such as flood control, water supply or energy production are still rare. This study aims to use ensemble streamflows as input of the recurrent reservoir operation problem which can incorporate (i) forecast uncertainty, (ii) forecasts with a higher lead-time and (iii) a higher stability. A related technique for decision making is multi-stage stochastic optimization using scenario trees, referred to as Tree-based Model Predictive Control (TB-MPC). This approach reduces the number of ensemble members by its tree generation algorithms using all trajectories and then proper problem formulation is set by Multi-Stage Stochastic Programming. The method is relatively new in reservoir operation, especially closed-loop hindcasting experiments and its assessment is quite rare in the literature. The aim of this study is to set a TB-MPC based real-time reservoir operation with hindcasting experiments. To that end, first hourly deterministic streamflows having one single member are produced using an observed flood hydrograph. Deterministic forecasts are tested with conventional deterministic optimization setup. Secondly, hourly ensemble streamflow forecasts having a lead-time up to 48 hours are produced by a novel approach which explicitly presents dynamic uncertainty evolution. Produced ensemble members are directly provided to input to related technique. Uncertainty becomes much larger when managing small basins and small rivers. Thus, the methodology is applied to the Yuvacik dam reservoir, fed by a catchment area of 258 km2 and located in Turkey, owing to its challenging flood control and water supply operation due to downstream flow constraints. According to the results, stochastic optimization outperforms conventional counterpart by considering uncertainty in terms of flood metrics without discarding water supply purposes. The closed-loop hindcasting experiment scenarios demonstrate the robustness of the system developed against biased information. In conclusion, ensemble streamflows produced from single member can be employed to TB-MPC for better real-time management of a reservoir control system.

How to cite: Uysal, G., Montero, R.-A., Schwanenberg, D., and Sensoy, A.: Real-Time Reservoir Operation by Tree-Based Model Predictive Control Including Forecast Uncertainty, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-896, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-896, 2019

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