Boyabat Dam | |
Location Map: | Turkey |
Coordinates: | 41.3386°N 35.002°W |
Country: | Turkey |
Location: | Boyabat, Sinop and Samsun Provinces |
Status: | O |
Construction Began: | 2008 |
Opening: | 2012 |
Cost: | US$1.2 billion |
Owner: | Boyabat Elektrik |
Dam Type: | Concrete gravity |
Dam Height: | 1950NaN0 |
Dam Length: | 2620NaN0 |
Dam Width Crest: | 100NaN0 |
Dam Volume: | 23000000NaN0 |
Dam Crosses: | Kızılırmak River |
Spillway Type: | Gated weir |
Spillway Capacity: | 82500NaN0 |
Res Capacity Total: | 35570000000NaN0 |
Res Capacity Active: | 14100000000NaN0 |
Res Capacity Inactive: | 21470000000NaN0 |
Res Catchment: | 647240NaN0 |
Res Surface: | 65.40NaN0 |
Res Max Length: | 600NaN0 |
Plant Hydraulic Head: | 141.30NaN0 (max) |
Plant Commission: | 2012 |
Plant Type: | Conventional |
Plant Turbines: | 3 x 171 MW Francis-type |
Plant Capacity: | 513 MW |
Plant Annual Gen: | 1,500 GWh[1] |
Website: | http://www.boyabatelektrik.com.tr/ (Turkish) |
The Boyabat Dam is a concrete gravity dam on the Kızılırmak River bordering Sinop and Samsun Provinces, Turkey. It is 80NaN0 southwest of Durağan and 240NaN0 southeast of Boyabat. Construction began in 2008 and the dam and power plant were completed in December 2012. Its primary purpose is to generate hydroelectric power. The dam's power plant has an installed capacity of 513 MW.
Plans for the dam first began in 1958 when the Electrical Works Survey Administration studied the river for hydropower potential. By 1979, Turkey's State Hydraulic Works (DSI) and Japan's Electric Power Development Company completed feasibility studies. A final study and proposal was completed soon after. In 1986, DSI began preliminary works which included access roads and the diversion tunnels. Doğuş Holding was awarded the dam's tender on 18 September 1995. They signed a concession with Turkey's Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources on 22 October 1998. However, a license to operate the power plant was not awarded until 14 November 2007.[2] Five Turkish banks had to fund US$750 million of the dam's US$1.2 billion price tag. The consortium owning the dam became Boyabat Elektrik.[3] Construction on the dam began in April 2008, was delayed and restarted January 2012.[4] The dam and power plant were accepted on 3 December 2012, and inaugurated nine days later.[5] [6]
Built in a steep gorge of the Ilgaz mountains, the concrete gravity dam is 1950NaN0 tall and 2620NaN0 long. Its crest is 100NaN0 wide and the body of the dam has a volume of 23000000NaN0. The reservoir created by the dam covers an area of 65.40NaN0 and is 600NaN0 long. It stores up to 35570000000NaN0 of water, 14100000000NaN0 of which can be used for power generation. A catchment area of 647240NaN0 drains run-off into the reservoir. The dam passes flood waters with a gated weir spillway that is located on its crest. The spillway is controlled by six radial gates that pass water into six chutes. The chutes combine into three and flip buckets at their base dissipate energy. The spillway can discharge up to 82500NaN0 of water. The dam's power station is embedded in its body at the base and contains three 171 MW Francis turbine-generators. The maximum hydraulic head is 141.30NaN0.[7]
The dam lake that reaches 60 km up-river and covers an area of 65,4 km2 changed the lives of 16.593 people living there. The new year 2012-1013 when the dam started collecting water 8 villages were inundated completely and 28 villages partly. Agricultural fields (2.840 in number, and 28.400.000 m2 in area), buildings (3.145 in number) were lost to the waters. A total area of 72.180.000 m2 was expropriated for 879.970.000 TRL. 1.435 of the residents had applied for relocation, of these 75% wished agricultural setting, 25% wished urban setting. The list of villages affected were as follows: Those administratively under Sinop's Saraydüzü : Yaylacılı, Fakılı, Akbelen, Hacıçay, Yalmansaray, Those administratively under Samsun's Vezirköprü: Susuz, Darıçay, Aşağı Darıçay, Kızılkese, Alanköy, Those administratively under Çorum's Osmancık : Aydın, Aşağı Zeytin, Yukarı Zeytin, Pelitçik, Aşıkbükü, Kalimavlağı, Those administratively under Çorum's Kargı : Avşar, Bağözü, Örencik, Saraycık, Sinanözü, Karaboya, Maksutlu, Köprübaşı, Demirören, Karapürçek, Gökçedoğan, and Karacaoğlan.[8]
The 513 MW installed power capacity on the dam was 9% of the total Turkish electric power generation capacity of 56.759 MW.[9] The investment was expected to generate 1 500 *106kWh per year worth 150 million TRL, a small but welcome correction to the 70% energy trade deficit of the country.[10] The 4 year construction period was also a temporary boon to the local economy.