A large number of reservoirs (or hydropower plants) have been constructed for flood control and energy production in the past several decades in the Yangtze River basin in China. The conventional scheduling rule curves (Scheme A) were designed in the reservoir construction period and did not consider river flow alternation, which needs to be modified to increase comprehensive benefits in the reservoir operation period. In this study, six large-scale cascade reservoirs or mega hydropower systems constructed and operated by the China Yangtze Three Gorges Cooperation were selected for this case study. The current joint scheduling plans of cascade reservoirs (Scheme B) were introduced, and a joint scheduling and multi-objective coordinating operation model (Scheme C) was proposed for this mega hydropower system. The Gaussian radial basis functions (GRBFs) were used to fit operation policies of each reservoir, and the Borg multi-objective evolutionary algorithm was selected to optimize three-objective functions for Scheme C. The observed daily flow data series at main hydrometric stations from 2003 to 2025 were used to simulate and compare different operation scheduling schemes. The results show that the performance of joint scheduling of cascade reservoirs (both Schemes B and C) is much better than the single-reservoir scheduling (Schemes A) with overall benefit; Scheme C-best achieves a comprehensive target of decreasing average annual spillway wastewater by 12.82 billion m3 (or a decrease of 28.5%), increasing average annual power generation by 31.02 billion kWh (or an increase of 10.7%), and improving average annual impoundment efficiency rate by 5.0%. The GRBF can fit reservoir operation policies well, while the Borg multi-objective evolutionary algorithm can quickly converge with high-precision non-dominated solution sets. The proposed joint scheduling and multi-objective coordinating operation model will provide a scientific basis for achieving maximum benefits in flood protection and hydropower generation for the mega hydropower system.
Guo et al. (Thu,) studied this question.