Thomson Dam | |
Location Map: | Victoria |
Location Map Caption: | Location of the Thomson Dam in Victoria |
Coordinates: | -37.8428°N 146.3989°W |
Country: | Australia |
Location: | West Gippsland, Victoria |
Purpose: | Water supply, irrigation |
Status: | O |
Construction Began: | 1976 |
Owner: | Melbourne Water |
Dam Type: | E |
Dam Crosses: | Thomson River |
Dam Volume: | 1.417e6m3 |
Spillway Count: | 1 |
Spillway Type: | Uncontrolled Ogee-shaped overflow weir and chute |
Res Name: | Thomson Reservoir (official); called Lake Thomson |
Res Capacity Total: | 1.12309e6ML |
Website: | Thomson Reservoir at Melbourne Water |
The Thomson Dam is a major Clay core and rockfill embankment dam with a Uncontrolled, Ogee-shaped overflow weir and chute spillway across the Thomson River, located about east of Melbourne in the West Gippsland region of the Australian state of Victoria. The reservoir (or storage basin) created by the dam is officially called Thomson Reservoir, sometimes called Lake Thomson.
The dam is located near the former township of Beardmore and the Baw Baw National Park.
Despite opposition from conservationists and farmers, plans for the dam were originally approved in late December 1975 to provide Melbourne with water security. A dam on the Thomson River was preferred because the river had a large flow, high water quality and was elevated high enough to provide water to the upper Yarra system by gravity flow.[1]
Early work in the early 1970s saw construction of a 19adj=midNaNadj=mid tunnel through the Thomson Yarra divide to allow water from the Thomson River to flow into the Upper Yarra Reservoir. Work on the dam itself commenced in 1976 and the completed dam and reservoir were ready to retain water by 1983.
The tunnel, which is located at the northern end of the reservoir, allows water to be transferred west to Upper Yarra Reservoir and then on to Silvan Reservoir for distribution as drinking water in Melbourne.
Downstream releases from Thomson Reservoir pass through a 7.4 MW[2] hydro power plant, at the base of the dam which generates electricity and feeds it into the state power grid.
Between 1997 and 2011, drought depleted much of the reservoir's water. In early January 2006, the Thomson Dam was at 45.4%. While there were minor rises in water levels occasionally, the Thomson Dam reached its all-time low of 16.2% on 3 July 2009.[3]
Heavy rainfall in 2010 and 2011 increased Melbourne's water storages to levels not seen for ten years.[4] The Thomson Dam entered winter 2011 at 39% full[5] and by the end of 2011 had reached 54.4% full.[6]
On 28 October 2022, the dam reached 100% capacity[7] and began spilling for the first time since the spring of 1996.
The Thomson Dam is managed by Melbourne Water.[8]