海角大神

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL SMALL BUSINESS
Contact Us
海角大神
  • Home Energy Options
    • Electricity By State
      • Texas
      • Connecticut
      • Maryland
      • Massachusetts
      • Pennsylvania
      • Other States
    • Natural Gas By State
      • Georgia
      • Illinois
      • Maryland
      • Ohio
      • Pennsylvania
      • Other States
    • Our Energy Products
      • Electricity
      • Natural Gas
      • Renewable Energy
      • EV Plans
      • A/C Protection Bundle Plans
      • Solar
      • Nuclear Energy Plan
  • More For Your Home
    • Smart Home
      • Connect
    • Sustainable Solutions
      • Electric Vehicles
      • Renewable Energy
      • Solar
    • Home Services
      • Georgia
      • Maryland
      • Pennsylvania
      • Texas
  • Energy 101
    • Energy Innovation
      • Best Thermostat Temp Settings
      • What is Energy Conservation?
      • What is Water Conservation?
      • What is a Smart Home
      • View All Articles
    • Energy Choice
      • How to Shop for Energy
      • Choosing an Energy Supplier
      • When are Electricity Rates Lowest?
      • How Does Electricity Pricing Work?
      • View All Articles
    • Weather Preparedness
      • Hurricane Safety Tips
      • Home Flooding Preparedness
      • Winter Storm Preparedness
      • Report a Power Outage
      • View All Articles
    • Energy Education
      • Home Tax Credits & Rebates
      • How to Read Your Energy Bill
      • Variable vs. Fixed-Rate Energy Plans
      • Short vs. Long-Term Energy Contracts
      • View All Articles
  • EV Solutions
      • EV Charger Installation
      • Rebates & Incentives
      • EV Electricity Plans
      • Cost of Ownership
      • Payment Options
      • Renew Service
      • Find My Renewal
      • 海角大神 Rewards
      • Report A Power Outage
      • Refer A Friend
      • Benefits & Energy Tools
      • FAQs
      • Track My Enrollment
    • Customer Login

      New User?

VIEW PLANS
海角大神
  • Electricity & Natural Gas
    • Electricity
      • Purchasing Strategies
      • Sustainability Strategies
    • Natural Gas
      • Purchasing Strategies
      • Sustainability Strategies
    • Request A Quote
  • Energy Resources
    • Resources
      • Natural Gas Tools
      • Podcasts
      • Energy Terms
      • Take Assessment
    • Request A Quote
  • Sustainability
    • 海角大神 Navigator
      • Utility Bill Management
      • Carbon Accounting
      • Rebate Administration
      • Sustainability Advisory Services
    • Energy Efficiency
      • Energy Solutions
      • Efficiency Made Easy
      • For Government
      • Fleet Electrification
    • Managing Carbon
      • Carbon-Free Energy Supply
      • Renewable Energy Certificates
      • Hourly CFE Matching
      • Carbon Offsets
    • Renewable Energy
      • 海角大神 Offsite Renewables
      • Solar
      • Renewable Natural Gas
  • Channel Partners
      • Associations
  • Emerging Tech
      • Tech Ventures
      • Data Centers
海角大神
  • Small Business Solutions
      • Electricity
      • Natural Gas
      • Commercial Services
      • 海角大神 Rewards
  • Energy Education Resources
      • Energy Shopping Tips
      • Energy Choice for Small Business
      • Small Business Resource Center
      • Understanding Energy Suppliers
      • Small Business Expenses
Menu
RESIDENTIAL
Home Energy Options
Electricity By State
Texas
Connecticut
Maryland
Massachusetts
Pennsylvania
Other States
Natural Gas By State
Georgia
Illinois
Maryland
Ohio
Pennsylvania
Other States
Our Energy Products
Electricity
Natural Gas
Renewable Energy
EV Plans
A/C Protection Bundle Plans
Solar
Nuclear Energy Plan
More For Your Home
Smart Home
Connect
Sustainable Solutions
Electric Vehicles
Renewable Energy
Solar
Home Services
Georgia
Maryland
Pennsylvania
Texas
Energy 101
Energy Innovation
Best Thermostat Temp Settings
What is Energy Conservation?
What is Water Conservation?
What is a Smart Home
View All Articles
Energy Choice
How to Shop for Energy
Choosing an Energy Supplier
When are Electricity Rates Lowest?
How Does Electricity Pricing Work?
View All Articles
Weather Preparedness
Hurricane Safety Tips
Home Flooding Preparedness
Winter Storm Preparedness
Report a Power Outage
View All Articles
Energy Education
Home Tax Credits & Rebates
How to Read Your Energy Bill
Variable vs. Fixed-Rate Energy Plans
Short vs. Long-Term Energy Contracts
View All Articles
EV Solutions
EV Charger Installation
Rebates & Incentives
EV Electricity Plans
Cost of Ownership
My Account
Payment Options
Renew Service
Find My Renewal
海角大神 Rewards
Report A Power Outage
Refer A Friend
Benefits & Energy Tools
FAQs
Track My Enrollment
VIEW PLANS
COMMERCIAL
Electricity & Natural Gas
Electricity
Purchasing Strategies
Sustainability Strategies
Natural Gas
Purchasing Strategies
Sustainability Strategies
Energy Resources
Resources
Natural Gas Tools
Podcasts
Energy Terms
Take Assessment
Sustainability
海角大神 Navigator
Utility Bill Management
Carbon Accounting
Rebate Administration
Sustainability Advisory Services
Energy Efficiency
Energy Solutions
Efficiency Made Easy
For Government
Fleet Electrification
Managing Carbon
Carbon-Free Energy Supply
Renewable Energy Certificates
Hourly CFE Matching
Carbon Offsets
Renewable Energy
海角大神 Offsite Renewables
Solar
Renewable Natural Gas
Channel Partners
Associations
Emerging Tech
Tech Ventures
Data Centers
SMALL BUSINESS
Small Business Solutions
Electricity
Natural Gas
Commercial Services
海角大神 Rewards
Energy Education Resources
Energy Shopping Tips
Energy Choice for Small Business
Small Business Resource Center
Understanding Energy Suppliers
Small Business Expenses
Contact Us

What Is Hydropower?

  • Home Page
  • Energy 101: Resources to Help Understand Energy
  • Energy Innovation
  • What Is Hydropower?
Print

With so much attention now being given to renewable energy, you may wonder: What is hydropower? And is hydropower renewable?

Hydropower is electricity generated by the flow of water. Where hydropower comes from is a process where water creates kinetic energy when it flows downhill. That energy turns turbines that power a generator to produce electricity.

In answer to the question, is hydropower renewable -- yes. Hydropower is a renewable energy source because it does not burn fossil fuels. It produces no greenhouse gasses, so it is also clean energy. Unlike wind and solar, water doesn鈥檛 stop flowing at night or during calm weather.听

It is not only one of the oldest, but is also among the most reliable .

, according to the U.S. Department of Energy, playing an important role in powering the country and reducing emissions.

How does hydropower work?

How does hydropower work?

The history of hydropower goes back thousands of years. Modern hydropower uses old principles. Water in a high place flows to a low place over a turbine, causing it to spin and power a generator. The flow can be natural, like Niagara Falls or it can be engineered.

In most cases, building a dam creates a reservoir. Water flowing from the reservoir through the dam pushes against turbines, causing them to spin. The turbines connect to a generator聽through a series of shafts and gears that turn the mechanical energy into electricity. Transmission lines deliver electricity to homes and businesses.

How is hydropower used? In most cases, it generates electricity. Because hydropower is clean, plentiful and low cost, the uses of hydropower include many power-hungry industries. Another answer for the question: What is hydropower used for, is to balance the load on the grid during high demand periods and to even out power generated by intermittent energy sources like wind and solar.

Types of hydropower plants

When talking about hydropower, you are really talking about several different types of hydropower technologies.

Impoundment

An impoundment hydropower plant is a fancy way of saying that a river has been dammed to create a reservoir. Water from the reservoir enters the plant from intakes that channel it through a penstock, essentially a tunnel through the dam that sends the water over turbines. The turbines spin to power a generator that creates electricity. Electricity from the plant flows out to customers via transmission lines.

Diversion

In a diversion hydropower plant, some water from a river is diverted into a canal to the power plant. So-called run-of-the-river plants have a much smaller impact on ecosystems and the environment. From the canal, water flows through a penstock into a powerhouse. There it turns turbines to power generators. Electricity flows to customers over transmission wires and water then flows back into the river.

Pumped Storage

These facilities include a reservoir at a higher elevation and a water source at a lower elevation. It works with a series of pumps. During times of low power demand, water is pumped from the lower reservoir to the upper. When customers need more power, the system reverses, sending water down to the turbines. This approach balances the load on the grid and can be a cost-efficient way to use available resources.

Cost of hydroelectric power

The cost of hydropower is comparatively low. Because it uses a renewable source of energy, flowing water, hydropower plants do not have to factor fuel costs into their prices.

The main costs to produce hydroelectric power are constructing the facility and then maintaining it.听Maintenance costs can be relatively low for properly constructed facilities, and the plants can last for last decades or longer. Some hydro聽plants are already operating into their second century. States that get much of their electricity from hydropower, such as Idaho, Washington, and Oregon, have .

History of hydroelectric power

Water wheels have been powering activities from grinding grain to making paper for thousands of years.

Hydropower technology took a leap forward in the early 1800s when French and English inventors separately developed advances in turbine engineering. The was a home project built in Northumberland in 1878. A few years later, a company in Wisconsin opened the first commercial hydroelectric plant.

In the 1880s, more plants opened in the Great Lakes area to supply electricity to factories and businesses. The first hydroelectric plant at Niagara Falls opened in 1895. Ten additional facilities were built there over time, the last one being the Robert Moses Niagara Hydroelectric Power Station completed in 1961. It includes a pumped storage facility, in addition to the diversion facility.

New Deal government spending funded the Hoover Dam, completed in 1936, and the Grand Coulee Dam, completed in 1942. More impoundment facilities were built during the 1940s through the 1970s to support first the war efforts and then population growth.

The U.S. is home to roughly . The largest of these is the Grand Coulee Dam across the Columbia River in Washington state. It has the capacity to generate . The oldest hydropower plant is the Whiting Hydroelectric Project built in Portage County that opened in 1891. In total, the United States currently has the hydroelectric capacity to produce of energy.

Renewable energy plans from 海角大神

Renewable energy is an important component of our strategy for serving your power needs. We invest in a mix of technologies and continue to support ways to bring reliable, clean energy to our customers. We invite you to explore residential renewable plans in your area.听

For additional tips on how to conserve natural resources and save energy, visit our .听

Explore Energy Plans in Your Area

Zip Code is not valid

Explore Energy Plans in Your Area

Zip Code is not valid

Residential
Home Energy Options
Home Services
Payment Options
Rates & Plans
Refer a Friend
FAQs
Home Energy Options
Home Services
Payment Options
Rates & Plans
Refer a Friend
FAQs
Business
Request a Quote
Small & Medium Business
Commercial
Request a Quote
Small & Medium Business
Commercial
Corporate Information
Get In Touch
Contact Us
Business: 844-6-ENERGY
GA Residential: 877-677-4355
TX Residential: 888-900-7052
Other Residential: 855-465-1244
Home Services: 844-823-HOME
Search
Contact Us
Business: 844-6-ENERGY
GA Residential: 877-677-4355
TX Residential: 888-900-7052
Other Residential: 855-465-1244
Home Services: 844-823-HOME
Search
Join the conversation:

触听 Privacy Policy 触听 触听 Blog Policy


漏 2025 海角大神. The offerings described herein are those of either 海角大神 NewEnergy, Inc., 海角大神 NewEnergy-Gas Division, LLC, 海角大神 Connect, LLC or 海角大神 Home Products & Services, LLC (d/b/a 海角大神 Home in Maryland and d/b/a 海角大神 in Georgia, Pennsylvania and Texas), each affiliates of each other. The prices of 海角大神 are not regulated by any state Public Utility Commission. You do not have to buy 海角大神 electricity, natural gas or any other products to receive the same quality regulated service from your local utility. Brand names and product names are trademarks or service marks of their respective holders. All rights reserved.听

Electricity or Gas Supplier License/Order #s and Home Services #s: CA 1359, CTA0032; CT 06-07-11, 01-06; DE 00-162; DC GA06-2, EA01-5; GA GM-46; IL 16-0205, 17-0330; IA G-0010; ME 2000-989; MD IR-655, IR-311, IR-500; MA GS-030, CS-015; MI U-14867, U-13660; NE NG-0043; NH DM 17-024; NJ GSL-0101, ESL-0016; OH 09-153G, 00-003E; PA A-125095, A-110036; OR ES4, RI 2379(Z1), D-96-6(E); TX 10014, B07305101; VA G-26, G-51, E-11A; TX Licenses HVAC TACLA 00107498R, Electrical TECL 343159, Service Plan TSCP #684, Plumbing #43217; GA REG CN-211051