Jump to content

Jordan River Dam

Coordinates: 48°29′47″N 123°59′34″W / 48.496517°N 123.992772°W / 48.496517; -123.992772 (Jordan River Dam)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 142.31.64.91 (talk) at 16:29, 6 May 2010. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Jordan River Dam, officially the Jordan River Diversion Dam, and known locally simply as Diversion Dam, is a dam located in Jordan River, British Columbia, Canada. It is part of the second hydroelectric development on Vancouver Island. [1]

History

Prior to the dam's construction, the Lubbe Powerhouse was the main source of electricity to Victoria. Upon completion, it dawrfed the p0lant.

The Vancouver Island Power Company completed construction of the Jordan River hydroelectric system in 1911. At 126 feet from top to bottom, it was upon its construction, the highest dam in Canada.

From 1912 to 1930 continual improvements and additional generators pushed the capacity of the power plant to 26 megawatts. In 1971 the flume was replaced by a tunnel, connected to a penstock flowing down to a new power house, presently located across the river from the original location. A Japanese built generator replaced the old equipment, boosting power output from 26 megawatts to 175 megawatts. [2]

Current operation

Water collects at Diversion Dam, runs 8.8 km down a wooden sluice to an equalizing reservoir and flows through a steel penstock for the last 330 vertical meters. It currently provides 35% of Vancouver Island's generating capacity.

In 1996, the provincial government initiated a Water Use Planning (WUP) program, demanding that BC's water licence holders show they can manage environmental problems of dams.The Jordan River "WUP" is now well-underway, and restoration of fish habitat has been a top issue.[2]

References

  1. ^ Peers, Elida (2007-03). "Jordan River Powerhouse". Rural Observer. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ a b Newcombe, John (2001-03-18). "A source of Victoria's power" (PDF). University of Victoria.

See also

48°29′47″N 123°59′34″W / 48.496517°N 123.992772°W / 48.496517; -123.992772 (Jordan River Dam)