Bull Run Hydroelectric Project
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The Bull Run Hydroelectric Project is a Portland General Electric (PGE) development in the Sandy River basin in the U.S. state of Oregon. Originally built between 1908 and 1912 near the town of Bull Run, it supplies hydroelectric power for the Portland area. The project uses a system of canals, tunnels, wood box flumes and diversion dams to feed a remote storage reservoir and power house. The entire project is slated for decommissioning due to rising environmental costs. Marmot Dam was removed in fall 2007,[1] and PGE plans to remove Little Sandy Dam in the summer of 2008.
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[edit] History and Overview
The Mount Hood Company began the project in 1906, building the Little Sandy Dam to divert water through a 3 mile (5 km) long wood box flume to Roslyn Lake. The last few miles of the Little Sandy river were effectively eliminated since the entire river was diverted, and all salmon and steelhead habitat above the dam was lost. Roslyn Lake, completed in 1911, was built on a plateau, about 320 feet (100 m) above the Bull Run River and Powerhouse. The 160 acre (650,000 m²) lake acts as a forebay for the powerhouse and has long been used by the community for recreation. The powerhouse was completed and put into operation in 1912,[2] the same year that the Mount Hood Company was bought by Portland Railway Light and Power Company, which would later become Portland General Electric.[citation needed]
In 1913 a second dam was built on the (Big) Sandy River. The 47 ft (14 m) high Marmot Dam would supply the majority of the project's water, about 600 ft³/s (17 m³/s), but use only a fraction of the Sandy's normal flow. The Sandy River, however, is on the other side of the Devil's Backbone ridge from the Little Sandy River. A series of canals and tunnels were required to reach the Little Sandy Dam, where their flows are combined and diverted to the flume and Roslyn Lake.
The Marmot Dam has always had fish ladders to allow migration of Salmon and Steelhead, however they performed poorly at first and have required frequent upgrades and maintenance, which continued into the 1990s. Fish screens were added in 1951 to prevent downstream migrating fish from entering the diversion and being killed by the water turbines.
In 1989 the original timber crib Marmot Dam was replaced with a concrete structure.
[edit] Operations
The powerhouse had a nameplate generating capacity of 21 MW and produced an average 13 MW, or about $6,600,000 worth of electricity annually (at local customer rates).[citation needed]
[edit] Facts
Nameplate Generating capacity | 21 MW |
FERC license | No. 477 |
Average power generation | 13 MW |
Average annual power generation | 110,000 MW·h (400 TJ) |
Electrical power value at $0.06/kW·h | $6,600,000 |
Sandy River water supply | 600 ft³/s (17 m³/s) (max) |
Little Sandy River water supply | 100% |
Flume capacity | 900 ft³/s (25 m³/s) (in any combination of Sandy or Little Sandy water) |
Lake surface area | 160 acres (650,000 m²) |
Usable storage capacity | 928 acre feet (1,145,000 m³) |
Penstocks | 2 x 1200 ft (370 m), 9 ft (2.7 m) diameter |
Hydraulic head | 320 ft (98 m or 960 kPa) |
Turbines | 4 |
[edit] Decommissioning
The decommissioning project required significant oversight, because Marmot Dam was the largest concrete dam ever removed in the United States.[3] PGE sought and received initial approval for the project from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in 1999. PGE later employed RESOLVE, a non-profit dispute resolution organization, to help develop a detailed consensus plan among the interested parties. An agreement was reached in 2002 on the decommissioning.[4] The primary issues addressed by the reviews were the impact on fish species (particularly salmonids), their habitat, and the effect of the release of 1 million cubic feet (28,000 m³) of sediment on the river course.[5] In 2004, PGE allowed its operating license to lapse, and filed a notice stating: "[…]the likely cost of providing the necessary level of protection, mitigation, and enhancement for the resources affected by the Project would outweigh the economic benefit of generation at the Project over the life of a new license[…]"[4] The project continued to operate with license extensions while decommissioning awaited approval. In 2006, PGE requested special approval of the decommissioning from the National Marine Fisheries Service, because of the project's potential impact on coho salmon. The final review was conducted by the United States Army Corps of Engineers, which granted approval for the decommissioning on May 21, 2007. A spokesman for the Corps stated that the removal project was unusual, because "Large dams usually don't get removed."[5]
Before Marmot Dam could be removed, a temporary coffer dam had to be built upstream. When this phase of the project was complete, the removal of the permanent concrete dam could proceed. The destruction of the permanent dam began on 26 July 2007, when a public controlled demolition weakened the structure. The rest of the dam was destroyed using pneumatic hammers over approximately 4 months.[6]. The last concrete from Marmot Dam was removed on September 30, 2007,[7] and the final phase of removal was completed on 20 October 2007, when the temporary earthen dam washed away and the Sandy River began to flow freely for the first time since 1912.[8].
As of 2007, PGE plans to remove Little Sandy Dam in the summer of 2008, eliminating Roslyn Lake. This is intended to restore the Little Sandy river habitat, and facilitate salmon and steelhead migrations. PGE is donating 1500 acres (6 km²) of the dam site to the Western Rivers Conservancy. This land is planned to form the core of a 9,000-acre (36 km²) natural refuge and public recreation area, which will be managed by the Bureau of Land Management.[7] PGE will transfer its hydroelectric water rights to the Oregon Water Resources Department.[citation needed] PGE has committed to assisting in monitoring, restoration, and other contingencies until 2017.[7]
[edit] References
- ^ "A river released to the wild", The Oregonian, July 29, 2007.
- ^ Taylor, Barbara. Sandy River: River History. Portland General Electric. Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
- ^ mccomie, grant. "2 the Outdoors - Marmot Dam Comes Down Soon" (html), KATU news, April 11, 2005. Retrieved on 2008-06-11. (English) "When the dam removal begins it will be the largest concrete dam in America to come down."
- ^ a b Decommissioning Plan for the Bull Run Hydroelectric Project, FERC Project No. 447, Filed by PGE with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Office of Hydropower Licensing, Washington DC, November 2002. (602 kB pdf)
- ^ a b Tucker, Libby (May 24, 2007). Bull Run dam removal poses engineering challenges. Daily Journal of Commerce. Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
- ^ Sarma, Daisy (2007-07-27). Blasts Spell Beginning of the End for Marmot Dam. The Money Times.
- ^ a b c Dam Removal Project. Portland General Electric (2007). Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
- ^ "Rain helps Sandy River run wild, free", The Oregonian, October 20, 2007.
- Taylor, Barbara (1998), Salmon and Steelhead Runs and Related events of the Sandy River Basin - A Historical Perspective, (prepared for PGE, 340Kb pdf).
- Settlement Agreement Concerning the Removal of the Bull Run Hydroelectric Project..., PGE and interested parties, Oct. 24 2002. ( 1.2MB pdf)
- Clean Water Act § 401 Certification Evaluation and Finding Report For the Decommissioning of the Bull Run Hydroelectric Project (FERC No. 477), Sandy River Basin, Clackamas County, Oregon 1.2MB pdf.
- Brinckman, Jonathan. "PGE will remove 2 dams in basin of Sandy River", The Oregonian, October 12, 2002.
[edit] External links
- McOmie, Grant. "Marmot Dam Comes Down Soon", KATU News, April 11, 2005.
- Oregonian article about current status of decommissioning
- Restoring the Sandy River overview of the project from American Rivers
- Marmot Dam removal from the Sandy River MarmotDam.com
- Taylor, William Thomas; Daniel Harvey Braymer (1917). American Hydroelectric Practice. McGraw-Hill Book Company, 123–124.