Sup'ung Dam Explained

See also: Supung Lake.

Sup'ung Dam
Location Map:China#North Korea
Coordinates:40.4619°N 124.9625°W
Country:China/North Korea
Location:Liaoning Province/North Pyongan.
Status:O
Construction Began:1937
Opening:1943
Dam Type:Gravity
Dam Height:1060NaN0
Dam Length:899.50NaN0
Dam Elevation Crest:126.40NaN0
Spillway Type:Main: 26 x sluice gates
Auxiliary: 16 x sluice gates
Spillway Capacity:Main: 376500NaN0
Auxiliary: 170460NaN0
Res Name:Supung Lake
Res Capacity Total:14600000000m2
Res Capacity Active:7900000000m2
Res Capacity Inactive:4180000000m2
Res Catchment:529120NaN0
Res Surface:2740NaN0
Res Elevation:1230NaN0
Plant Hydraulic Head:770NaN0
Plant Operator:Korea-China Hydroelectric Co
Plant Commission:1941
Plant Turbines:6 x 105 MW Francis-type
2 x 67.5 MW Francis-type
Plant Capacity:765 MW

The Sup'ung Dam, also referred to as the Shuifeng Dam and originally the Suihō Dam, is a gravity dam on the Yalu River between Kuandian Manchu Autonomous County, Liaoning Province in China and Sakju County, North Pyongan Province in North Korea. The dam was constructed by the Japanese between 1937 and 1943 in order to generate electricity and has been repaired and renovated several times throughout the years, mainly due to spillway damage from flooding.

During the Korean War, the dam was bombed by the United Nations Command three separate times in order to disrupt power generation for the North Koreans. At the time of its completion, the dam was the largest in Asia, and power station was third-largest (after Hoover Dam and Wilson Dam) hydroelectric power station in the world. It is still the largest hydroelectric power station on the Yalu (Korean: Amnok) River. Power produced at the dam's main 630 MW power station is evenly shared between China and North Korea.

The dam is featured on the national emblem of North Korea.

Background

In 1937, during Japan's colonization of Korea, the Yalu Hydroelectric Company was established and in the same year construction began on the dam, with the Pyeongbuk Railway opening a rail line in 1939 to assist with the construction.[1] In 1941, the dam was complete with two 100 MW generators operational, and the emperor of Manchukuo, Puyi, visited the dam.[2] Four more generators were later operational in 1943. The seventh generator was German-made and not delivered due to shipping difficulties during World War II. At the time of its completion, the dam was the largest in Asia and third largest in the world. Power from the dam was used throughout the Korean peninsula and southern Manchuria (Manchukuo at the time).[3] [4] After World War II, in 1947, the Soviet Union occupied the area, and dismantled and carried three of the seven generators to the Irtysh River dam in Kazakhstan. They were later re-installed during the 1950s.[5]

Korean War attacks

See main article: Attack on the Sui-ho Dam.

The dam's power station and transformer yard were targeted by the United Nations Command three times during the Korean War in order to disrupt power supply. Between 23 and 24 June 1952, the dam was attacked by 250 bombers and fighters, dropping 90 tons of munitions on the power station, transformer yard and auxiliary facilities. The power station was destroyed but the dam left intact. After intelligence indicated it may have been partially operational again, the power station was again targeted and disabled on 12 September 1952 by B-29 bombers. By 1 February 1953, it was believed that two generators had been repaired and were operational once again. This resulted in a third raid on the dam on 15 February which left the power station inoperable once again.[5]

Repairs and renovations

Throughout the dam's history, it underwent several renovations and repairs. Flooding in 1946 damaged the stilling basin at the toe of the dam and destroyed its spillway, requiring repairs the next year. Between September 1949 and April 1950, in a second repair, the spillway and plunge pool were renovated. Between 1955 and 1958, permanent post-war repairs were made to the dam and power station. The generators removed by the Soviets were replaced and the installed capacity of the power station upgraded to 630 MW.[6] In 1983, China began constructing an additional power station just downstream of the dam on their side of the river with two 67.5 MW generators. The first was commissioned in 1987 and the second in 1988.[7] The most recent renovation occurred between 2009 and 2011 in order to improve the function of the dam's spillways. The US$24.5 million renovation was funded by State Grid Corporation of China.[8]

Design

The Supung is a 1060NaN0 tall and 899.50NaN0 long concrete gravity dam with a crest elevation of 126.40NaN0. The dam's spillway consists of 26 sluice gates with a maximum discharge capacity of 376500NaN0. An auxiliary spillway 1.70NaN0 north of the dam consists of 16 sluice gates and has a maximum discharge capacity of 170460NaN0. The dam's reservoir has a capacity of 14600000000m2 of which 7900000000m2 is active (or "useful") for power generation. The dam sits at the head of a 529120NaN0 catchment area and its reservoir has a surface area of 2740NaN0. The original power station at the base of the dam contains six 105 MW Francis turbine-generators which are afforded an average hydraulic head of 770NaN0.[6] [9] The additional power station on China's side contains two 67.5 MW Francis turbine generators. The total installed capacity of the dam's power stations is 765 MW.[7]

See also

Notes and References

  1. 朝鮮總督府官報 (The Public Journal of the Governor-General of Korea), Shōwa Nr. 3813, 3 October 1939
  2. Kokubu, Hayato, 将軍様の鉄道 (Shōgun-sama no Tetsudō),
  3. Book: Rees, David. Korea: An Illustrated History from Ancient Times to 1945. 2001. Hippocrene Books. 0-7818-0873-1. 131. registration. Supung Dam Yalu 1937..
  4. Book: K. Armstrong, Charles. Korea at the Center: Dynamics of Regionalism in Northeast Asia. 2005. M.E. Sharpe. 0-7656-1656-4. 95. Samuel S. Kim . Stephen Kotkin .
  5. Book: Stewart. James T.. Airpower. 1980. Arno Press. New York. 0-405-12204-7. 129.
  6. Web site: Kai. Yu. Shuifeng dam design review comments. Ministry of Water Resources Survey. 27 August 2011. Northeast Changchun. Chinese. 1998.
  7. Web site: Supung station (before restoration) Details. Sino Hydro. 27 August 2011. Chinese. 5 October 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20111005210210/http://www.sinohydro.com/508-1352-10555.aspx. dead.
  8. Web site: China completes renovation of hydropower station on river bordering DPRK. https://web.archive.org/web/20110716172426/http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/china/2011-06/28/c_13954849.htm. dead. July 16, 2011. Xinhua News Agency. 27 August 2011. 28 June 2011.
  9. Web site: Hydraulic structure Shuifeng Dam. Weipu Academic. 27 August 2011. Chinese. dead. https://archive.today/20120709192538/http://club.cqvip.com/html/29/384410.shtml. 9 July 2012.