Terminus Dam Explained

Terminus Dam
Coordinates:36.4169°N -119.0039°W
Location:Three Rivers, Tulare County, California, United States
Cost:$24 million[1]
Owner: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Sacramento District
Dam Type:Earthfill
Dam Height:255feet[2]
Dam Length:2375feet
Dam Volume:7000000yd3
Dam Elevation Crest:750feet
Dam Crosses:Kaweah River
Res Name:Lake Kaweah
Res Capacity Total:185600acre feet
Res Catchment:561mi2
Res Surface:1945acres
Plant Commission:1992
Plant Capacity:20.09 MW
Plant Annual Gen:40,894,000 KWh (2001–2012)[3]
Website:U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Lake Kaweah / Terminus Dam

Terminus Dam is a dam on the Kaweah River in Tulare County, California in the United States, located near Three Rivers about 15miles from the western boundary of Sequoia National Park and 20miles east of Visalia. The dam forms Lake Kaweah for flood control and irrigation water supply. Completed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) in 1962, Terminus is an earthfill dam 255feet high and 2375feet long. The reservoir has a maximum capacity of 185600abbr=onNaNabbr=on of water, although it usually sits at much lower levels.

History

Terminus Dam is one of four dams built on the rivers of the Tulare Lake basin, located at the southern end of the San Joaquin Valley. In the 1920s, the USACE and the State of California first surveyed the area for suitable reservoir sites to provide irrigation water.[4] After devastating floods in the late 1930s, the Flood Control Act of 1944 authorized the USACE to build Terminus Dam as part of a system to provide flood protection for the Tulare basin.[5]

In 1948, with plans for the dam on the Kaweah River nearly complete, an archaeological survey of the future reservoir site revealed an unusually rich selection of Native American artifacts.[6] Many of these were removed by the U.S. National Park Service's Interagency Archaeological Salvage Program before the beginning of work on the dam.[7]

Construction of Terminus Dam started in the late 1950s and was completed in 1962. The dam was dedicated along with the Success Dam, further south on the Tule River, on May 18, 1962.[4] The reservoir filled for the first time in 1964 to its initial capacity of 150000acre feet.[8] Sedimentation had reduced this to 143200acre feet according to a study conducted in 1977.[9]

Together with the three other major dams in the Tulare basin, Terminus Dam contributed to the desiccation of Tulare Lake, once one of the largest wetland regions in the United States.[10]

Spillway expansion

In the 1990s the USACE began studies for a project to increase the capacity of the dam's spillway, which was considered inadequate to pass the probable maximum flood on the Kaweah River. In 2001 work began to enlarge the spillway channel and between 2003 and 2004 six fusegates were installed in the spillway channel, raising the maximum elevation of the reservoir by 21feet. The fusegates, invented and patented by François Lempérière[11] for Hydroplus, subsidiary of GTM Entrepose, are the largest in the world, and are designed to open automatically by water pressure when Lake Kaweah reaches dangerously high levels. The design was chosen because it would provide cost savings over conventional options such as a concrete or gated spillway.[12]

The project increased the storage capacity of Lake Kaweah by more than 40000acre feet, to its current capacity of 185600acre feet, and ensured the capability of Terminus Dam to pass a flood of up to 300000cuft/s.[13] The dam is now capable of completely controlling a 70-year flood, as compared to a 46-year flood before the fusegates were installed.[14]

Functions

As a dry dam, Terminus Dam's primary purpose is flood control; consequently, the reservoir is usually maintained at a very low level, except in late spring and early summer when it is used to store snowmelt runoff from the Sierra Nevada.[15] The dam provides flood protection for 500000acres of farmland and 300,000 people along the lower Kaweah River.[1] Shortly after its completion, the dam and reservoir were put to the test by record floods in December 1966, during which Terminus, Success and Isabella Dams prevented a collective $81.9 million of damages.[16] Between 1962 and 2012, Terminus Dam has prevented $373,225,000 of flood-related damages.[17]

Water releases from Terminus Dam are made based on agricultural demand when flood control releases are not required. Snowmelt runoff stored in Lake Kaweah are released at high rates between May and late July-early August during the peak of the irrigation season. The water serves multiple local water districts such as the Tulare Irrigation District (TID) and Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District (KDWCD), as well as urban areas including Visalia and Tulare.[18] [19] The dam also generates hydroelectricity from a plant built in 1992 by the Kaweah River Power Authority (KRPA), which is jointly managed by TID and KDWCD.[20] Electricity generated here is distributed by Southern California Edison. The power plant currently has a capacity of 20.09 megawatts (MW),[21] upgraded from its original capacity of 17 MW, and generates roughly 40 million kilowatt hours (KWh) per year. The KRPA planned to expand this capacity by a further 9 MW, which would allow for the generation of an additional 9.2 million KWh,[21] but construction has not yet started . In February 2020, the KRPA filed to transfer their operating license to Eagle Creek Renewable Energy, the US subsidiary of Ontario Power Generation.[22] [23]

See also

Works cited

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Recent District Projects. Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District. 2013-07-24. 2011-04-09. https://web.archive.org/web/20110409183443/http://www.kdwcd.com/kdwcdweb_002.htm. dead.
  2. Web site: Terminus Dam (TRM). California Department of Water Resources. California Data Exchange Center. 2013-07-23.
  3. Web site: California Hydroelectric Statistics & Data. California Energy Commission. 2018-04-26. 2018-02-26. https://web.archive.org/web/20180226135225/http://www.energy.ca.gov/almanac/renewables_data/hydro/index.php. dead.
  4. Brewer, p. 55
  5. Garone, p. 193
  6. Web site: Native Occupation of the Terminus Reservoir Region. U.S. National Park Service. Terminus Reservoir: Geology, Paleontology, Flora & Fauna, Archeology, History . 2013-07-23.
  7. Web site: The Inter-Agency Archeological Salvage Program. U.S. National Park Service. Terminus Reservoir: Geology, Paleontology, Flora & Fauna, Archeology, History . 2013-07-23.
  8. Book: Kaweah River Basin Investigation, California, Tulare County and King County: Environmental Impact Statement. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. 1996. 138.
  9. Book: Kaweah River Basin Investigation, California, Tulare County and King County: Environmental Impact Statement. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. 1996. 243.
  10. Garone, p. 194
  11. Web site: Patents by Inventor Francois Lemperiere . Justia Patents.
  12. News: They might be giants - Terminus dam's new Fusegates. Water Power & Dam Construction. 2004-02-16. 2013-07-23.
  13. Web site: The Fusegate System Reaches New Heights in California. Hydroplus. Kocahan, Hasan T. . Suter, Norbert F. . 2013-07-23.
  14. News: Lake Kaweah Adds Safety, Capacity with Big Fusegates . Rosta, Paul B.. Engineering News-Record. 2004-01-19. 2013-07-23.
  15. Web site: Terminus Dam (TRM) Reservoir Information. California Department of Water Resources. California Data Exchange Center. 2013-07-23.
  16. Web site: Floods of December 1966 in the Kern-Kaweah Area, Kern and Tulare Counties, California. U.S. Geological Survey. Dean, Willard W. . Scott, Kevin M. . Geological Survey Water-Supply Paper 1870-C. 2013-07-23.
  17. News: Ritchie, Ashley. Lake Kaweah Celebrates 50 Years . KMPH Visalia. 2012-05-09. 2013-07-23.
  18. Web site: Case Study: Kaweah River Power Authority and Tulare ID. California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. California Energy Commission Agricultural Peak Load Reduction Program. 2013-07-23.
  19. Web site: About Us. Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District. 2013-07-23.
  20. Web site: District Profile. Tulare Irrigation District. 2013-07-23.
  21. Web site: Kaweah River Power Authority; Notice of Preliminary Permit Application Accepted for Filing and Soliciting Comments, Motions To Intervene, and Competing Applications. U.S. Government Printing Office. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Project No. 14436-000. 2012-08-28. 2022-07-19.
  22. Web site: Kaweah River Power Authority, Terminus Hydroelectric, LLC; Notice of Application for Transfer of License and Soliciting Comments, Motions To Intervene, and Protests. February 28, 2020. July 19, 2022. . Federal Register. National Archives and Records Administration. https://web.archive.org/web/20220719171744/https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2020/02/28/2020-04130/kaweah-river-power-authority-terminus-hydroelectric-llc-notice-of-application-for-transfer-of. July 19, 2022. live.
  23. News: Kaweah River Power Authority selling hydro plant to Canadian operator. March 11, 2020. July 19, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20200314152006/https://thesungazette.com/article/news/2020/03/11/kaweah-river-power-authority-selling-hydro-plant-to-canadian-operator/. March 14, 2020. live. John. Lindt. The Sun-Gazette. Mineral King Publishing. Exeter, CA.