Barra Grande Dam | |
Name Official: | Barra Grande Hydroelectric Power Plant |
Dam Crosses: | Pelotas River |
Location: | Celso Ramos, Santa Catarina/Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil |
Dam Type: | Embankment, concrete face rock-fill |
Dam Length: | 665m (2,182feet) |
Dam Height: | 185m (607feet) |
Dam Width Base: | 500m (1,600feet) |
Dam Width Crest: | 14m (46feet) |
Spillway Type: | Service, controlled |
Construction Began: | 2001 |
Opening: | 2005 |
Cost: | $1.5 billion USD |
Owner: | Energética Barra Grande SA (BAESA) |
Res Name: | Barra Grande Reservoir |
Res Surface: | 94km2 |
Plant Turbines: | 3 x 236MW Francis turbines |
Plant Capacity: | 708MW |
Plant Commission: | 2005–2006 |
Location Map: | Brazil |
Coordinates: | -27.7767°N -51.1897°W |
Website: | BAESA |
The Barra Grande Hydroelectric Power Plant is a dam and hydroelectric power plant on the Pelotas River near Celso Ramos on the border of Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. The power station has a 708 MW capacity and is supplied with water by a concrete face rock-fill embankment dam, the second tallest dam in Brazil.[1] It is owned and operated by Energética Barra Grande SA (BAESA) and produces a 30% equivalent of the demand in Santa Catarina.[2]
Construction on the dam began in May 2001 by the consortium BAESA whose stakeholders include Alcoa 42.2%, Companhia Paulista de Força e Luz (CPFL) 25%, Companhia Brasileira de Alumínio (CBA) 15%, Camargo Corrêa Cimentos 9%, and DME Energética 8.8%. On 1 November 2005, the first generator went into operation, the second in February 2006 and the third in May of the same year.[3] [4] In September 2005 after construction was complete and the reservoir began to fill, the concrete face on the upstream side of the dam cracked, causing a leak of 1280 liters/s. In June 2007, soil was dumped in the area which reduced the leak to 800 L/s. The dam still remains safe.[5]
The Barra Grande Dam is a long and 185m (607feet) high concrete face rock-fill embankment dam. At its base, it is wide and at its crest. The dam impounds a reservoir with a surface area of which supplies water to three 236 MW Francis turbines in the power station.[1]
Construction of the dam required clearing of araucaria, a Brazilian pine tree, of which only 1% to 7% of their original forest survives. Other species threatened by the reservoir were the endangered bromeliad Dyckia distachya and Paraná. The environmental controversy require BAESA to extend and acquire new licenses along with spending extra money on programs.[6] [7] [8]