Cowans Ford Hydroelectric Station Explained

Cowans Ford Hydroelectric Station
Location:Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, United States
Status:Operational
Construction Began:1959
Opening:1963
Owner:Duke Energy
Operator:Duke Energy
Dam Height Foundation:134 ft
Dam Length:8738 ft
Res Name:Lake Norman
Res Capacity Total:1,093,600 acre-feet (1,348,900,000 m³)
Res Surface:NaN50.80
Plant Turbines:4 x 87.5MWKaplan-type
Plant Capacity:350.0 MW
Plant Annual Gen:154,287.4 MWh

Cowans Ford Hydroelectric Station is a hydroelectric power plant and dam located near Huntersville, North Carolina, approximately 20 miles north of Charlotte on Lake Norman. It is the largest conventional hydro station owned by Duke Energy, generating up to 350 MW of power.[1]

Three units began generating electricity in 1963, with a fourth unit beginning operation in 1967. They supply "peaking power"—extra electricity needed to meet demand when it is needed most—typically hot summer days and cold winter mornings.[1]

Cowans Ford Dam impounds the Catawba River to create Lake Norman, the largest man-made body of fresh water in North Carolina. The lake provides water to Lincoln County and the communities of Davidson, Mooresville, Charlotte and Huntersville. The lake was named for former Duke Power president Norman Cocke.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://files.nc.gov/ncdcr/historic-preservation-office/PDFs/ER%2003-0359.pdf National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) Evaluation of the Cowans Ford Hydroelectric Development. Retrieved 2024-08-06.
  2. Web site: Lake Norman . 2012-08-12 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111016004635/http://huntersville.org/Visitors/LakeNorman.aspx . 2011-10-16 .