Cobb Power Station Explained

Cobb Power Station
Country:New Zealand
Location:Tasman District
Coordinates:-41.0861°N 172.7322°W
Owner:Manawa Energy
Status:Operational
Th Technology:Hydroelectric
Ps Units Operational:6
Ps Electrical Capacity:32MW
Commissioned:1944

The Cobb Power Station is a hydroelectric facility on the Cobb River, in the Tasman District of New Zealand. The power station is located in Upper Tākaka, 112km (70miles) northwest of Nelson. Annual generation is approximately .[1] The initial stages of the construction of the station began as a privately-funded scheme in 1935, but the investor failed to raise the necessary capital. The national government took over building the station and the first power was produced in 1944, operating as a run-of-river station. A storage dam was completed in 1954. The resulting hydro lake is the highest in the country and at 596m (1,955feet), the station has New Zealand's highest hydraulic head of any power station.

History

Early supply of electricity to the Nelson /Tasman region included a small scheme at Motueka that had been approved in 1919,[2] and a coal-fired steam generating plant commissioned in Nelson in 1923.[3] The Pupu Hydro Power Scheme near Tākaka and the Onekaka Power Station in Onekaka were both commissioned in 1929, the latter initially just supplying the Onekaka Ironworks. However, by 1934, rapidly increasing demand led to the need for additional generating capacity in the region. At the time, the region was not connected to the rest of the South Island national grid, and central Government did not have firm plans for additional generation in the area.

Hume Pipe Company scheme

In 1935, the Waimea and Golden Bay Electric Power Boards, together with Nelson City Council, supported a proposal by the Hume Pipe Company to construct a hydro power station on the Cobb River.

The Hume Pipe Company was an Australian-based company active in mining and manufacture of asbestos. It was led by Walter Hume who invented the spun concrete pipe. The company was interested in mining in the Tākaka and Collingwood areas, and combining the extraction of asbestos from the upper Tākaka River and cement from Tarakohe. However, they required a large supply of electricity,[4] and proposed the development of a hydro power station on the Cobb River where it descended around 2000feet in a direct line of less than 3abbr=onNaNabbr=on. The scheme was to divert water from the upper reaches of the Cobb River, and then through tunnels and penstocks to the powerhouse, located at the junction of the Tākaka and Cobb Rivers.

A 40-year licence was granted to Hume Pipe Company in July 1935, on the basis that they were to sell surplus electricity for use in the Nelson region, and that power should be delivered within two years. However, in 1936, the Hume Pipe Company failed to raise the necessary capital to commence construction of the scheme. Work began on construction of an access road from Upper Tākaka to the site of the power station. In 1938, Hume asked the New Zealand government to underwrite an issue of debenture capital, but this was rejected by the Minister of Finance, Walter Nash.

Government ownership

The government took over the project in 1940. By that stage, a powerhouse building had been constructed that would accommodate four generating units. Further work was delayed by shortages of labour and materials during World War II, and the first power was not generated until June 1944. At that stage, there was no storage and the scheme operated as a run-of-river station.

Storage was required to enable more reliable generation. The site of the dam for the scheme was found to be not suitable for a concrete dam, and over the period 1949 to 1954 an earth dam was built instead. The height of the dam above the foundation is 35m (115feet) and it has a crest length of 214m (702feet). The dam was commissioned in 1954, and at the time, it was the largest dam of its type in New Zealand. The nominal elevation of the Cobb Reservoir above sea level is 808m (2,651feet), making it the highest hydro storage lake in the country.

Cobb was the main generating station supplying the Nelson and Tasman areas as an isolated electricity supply network until 1955, when a transmission line connection was made from Stoke to the rest of the South Island grid.

Changes of ownership

In 1997, as part of reforms of the energy sector, the New Zealand Government decided to sell eight small power stations including Cobb.[5] The Cobb Power Station was sold to the Canadian company TransAlta in 1999.[6] [7] There was a change of ownership only a year later, when the Natural Gas Corporation (NGC) purchased TransAlta New Zealand.[8] In 2003, there was a further change of ownership, when TrustPower purchased the power station from NGC.[9] Trustpower restructured its business in 2022, and sold its retail energy business to Mercury Energy. The generation part of the business was rebranded as Manawa Energy and launched on 2 May 2022.[10]

Description

The station is fed by the Cobb Reservoir and has a head of 596m (1,955feet), the highest of any power station in New Zealand.[11] From the reservoir, a 2.6km (01.6miles) long tunnel leads through the Cobb Range to the penstocks. The water flow is channelled via two 4km (02miles) long penstocks and the height difference between the intake and the power station results in a high pressure water flow of 7.25 m³/s to feed the six Pelton turbines.[12]

Cobb Power Station can be reached from Upper Tākaka via a sealed but winding and narrow 16km (10miles) road along Tākaka River. The power station building is situated at the edge of Kahurangi National Park, with the reservoir located entirely within the national park, another 14km (09miles) further up an unsealed steep and winding road. The access road to the reservoir is the only road into the interior of Kahurangi National Park.[13]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cobb Power Station . https://web.archive.org/web/20160226232237/http://www.trustpower.co.nz/our-assets-and-capability/power-generation/cobb . 26 February 2016 . 3 December 2015 . TrustPower.
  2. News: 24 December 1919 . Electricity for Motueka . Nelson Evening Mail . 3 . . 22 February 2024 . 28 January 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240128035051/https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM19191224.2.8 . live .
  3. Web site: Nelson's power struggle . 10 February 2024 . www.theprow.org.nz . 28 January 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240128035049/https://www.theprow.org.nz/enterprise/electricity-in-nelson/ . live .
  4. Web site: The Cobb – The History of The Cobb River Hydro-Electric Power Scheme NZETC . 2024-02-10 . nzetc.victoria.ac.nz . 28 January 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240128031542/https://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-NHSJ05_06-t1-body1-d14.html . live .
  5. News: Edwards . Brent . 25 February 1997 . Peters defends sale of power stations . Evening Post . .
  6. News: 28 May 1999 . TransAlta buys Cobb power station . The Press . .
  7. News: 28 May 1999 . Cobb sale marks the end of an era . The Nelson Mail . .
  8. News: 22 August 2002 . Cobb power station on the block again . The Nelson Mail . .
  9. News: 4 March 2003 . TrustPower takes over Cobb station . The Nelson Mail . .
  10. Web site: 2022-11-09 . Manawa Energy posts $390m profit . 2024-01-21 . RNZ . en-nz . 28 January 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240128020634/https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/business/478360/manawa-energy-posts-390m-profit . live .
  11. Web site: Cobb Valley. Department of Conservation NZ. 2015-12-03. 8 December 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20151208064139/http://www.doc.govt.nz/parks-and-recreation/places-to-go/nelson-tasman/places/kahurangi-national-park/cobb-valley/. live.
  12. Web site: Cobb Dam. Engineering New Zealand Te Ao Rangahau. 10 February 2024. 27 August 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230827154049/https://www.engineeringnz.org/programmes/heritage/heritage-records/cobb-dam/. live.
  13. Web site: Hindmarsh . Gerard . 1 June 2019 . Cobb scheme still a powerhouse after 75 years . 10 February 2024 . . 22 October 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221022223936/https://www.stuff.co.nz/nelson-mail/news/113144991/cobb-scheme-still-a-powerhouse-after-75-years . live .