Salt Springs Reservoir Explained

Salt Springs Reservoir
Coords:38.4986°N -120.215°W
Basin Countries:United States
Elevation:3900feet
Cities:Tamarack
Pushpin Map:California#USA
Pushpin Map Alt:Location of Salt Springs Reservoir in California, USA.

Salt Springs Reservoir is a reservoir in the eastern portions of Amador County and Calaveras County of California in the Sierra Nevada about 30miles east-northeast of Jackson. The reservoir is in the Eldorado National Forest at an elevation of 3900feet.

The 141900acre.foot reservoir is formed by Salt Springs Dam on the North Fork of the Mokelumne River. The concrete-faced rock-fill dam is 332feet tall and was completed in . It is owned by Pacific Gas and Electric and its sole purpose is hydroelectricity production, though limited recreation is available. A short pipeline from the reservoir conveys water to the 44 MW Salt Springs Powerhouse. Some of the water is returned to the river downstream, but much of it flows into the Tiger Creek Conduit, a concrete flume that moves water downstream for use in other powerhouses in PG&E's Mokelumne River Project (FERC Project 137).

The dam has a history of settlement problems caused by poor consolidation of the rocks during construction. The concrete face has been cracked many times by the movement, causing leaks. The surface of the dam consists of cracks, craters and shotcrete overlays. It was decided to use a flexible geomembrane to cover the portions of the dam with the greatest leakage. The installation of the membrane was completed in 2005.

The dam is being examined as the lower pool in a 380-1,140 MW pumped-storage project with the Bear River Dam as the upper pool.[1]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: FERC Seeks Input on App for 1,140-MW GreenGenStorage Pumped Storage Hydro Project. 14 October 2016.