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As a result of these extreme efforts, the Hyatt Powerplant was successfully protected
from the unprecedented high backwater caused by the incident.
The six turbines in the Hyatt Powerplant can only produce power when
connected to the State’s electric power grid. They also must be spinning and
generating power in order to release water from the reservoir to the Feather River
channel. The assessment of DWR’s power lines and towers connecting the
Powerplant to the power grid became a high priority since the loss of the power lines
would prevent the ability to discharge up to 479.9 m3/s (16500 ft3/s) from the reservoir
once the water dropped below the sill of the FCO. Monitoring and assessment teams
became aware that continued erosion on the right (north) side of the FCO Spillway
chute could compromise at least one of the transmission towers on the right side of
the chute. The risk of losing this one tower was increasing and the impact could
have resulted in the failure of numerous towers and power lines. This in turn
increased the safety risks for responders and the possibility of losing the power grid
connection to the powerplant for months, if not years. The OICT Commander
ordered additional monitoring and risk assessments of this transmission tower as
well as contingency and mitigation plans. It was determined that the tower power
lines must be cut, and the tower removed to protect responders, prevent failure of
multiple towers, and reduce the threat to the other high-voltage electric power in the
area. These actions were approved by the OICT Commander, scheduled into
working Actions Plans, coordinated with cooperating partners and the public, and
then successfully implemented. Mitigations measures were then necessary to plan,
design, and install shoe-fly power lines over the FCO Spillway chute away from the
erosion threats. This process was completed with a high level of coordination with
OICT Planning, Operations and Logistics teams, the FCO Spillway Strike Team, the
Hyatt Powerplant Strike Team, the Emergency Spillway Strike Team, contractors,
and the other power utility (Pacific Gas and Electric, PG&E). This work was
successfully completed just as sufficient debris was removed from the Feather River
channel to allow the water elevation to drop low enough for safe reoperation of the
Hyatt Powerplant. This allowed DWR to begin releasing additional water from the
reservoir and reduced the need to use the FCO Spillway for the remainder of the
2017 runoff season.
5.1.6 Electric Power Grid Considerations
An additional 230 kV electric power line, which is critical to California’s electric
power grid, crossed the Oroville Dam facility just downstream of the confluence of
the FCO Spillway chute and the Feather River in the area of a large rock debris pile
in the river channel. Debris removal was critical to getting the Powerplant back on
line, but the use of tall equipment working in proximity to the transmission lines was
an extremely high risk. Mitigation alternatives developed and implemented to protect
the power lines and the electric power grid, which included flooding the barge and
allowing it to sit lower in the water, drawing down the water elevation in the river
55
Book of Full Papers
Symposium Hydro Engineering
- Titel
- Book of Full Papers
- Untertitel
- Symposium Hydro Engineering
- Autor
- Gerald Zenz
- Verlag
- Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz
- Ort
- Graz
- Datum
- 2018
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-85125-620-8
- Abmessungen
- 20.9 x 29.6 cm
- Seiten
- 2724
- Schlagwörter
- Hydro, Engineering, Climate Changes
- Kategorien
- International
- Naturwissenschaften Physik
- Technik