Perunchani Dam | |
Name Official: | Perunchani Dam |
Location Map: | India Tamil Nadu |
Coordinates: | 8.3844°N 77.3744°W |
Opening: | December 1952 |
Owner: | Water Resources Organization, Government of Tamil Nadu |
Dam Type: | Straight Gravity Masonry dam with concrete Spillway |
Dam Height: | above foundation |
Dam Crosses: | Paralayar River, a tributary of Tamiraparani River |
Spillway Count: | One |
Spillway Capacity: | 894.91m2 per second |
Res Name: | Perunchani Reservoir |
Res Capacity Total: | Live storage 818400000m2 |
Plant Operator: | Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation Limited |
Plant Commission: | Unit 1: 21 December 2005 Unit 2: January 22, 2006 |
Plant Turbines: | 2 × 650 KW[1] |
Plant Capacity: | 1.3 MW |
Perunchani Dam is an irrigation dam at Perunchani, Kanyakumari District, in the state of Tamil Nadu, India. It is one of the dams of the Kodayar Irrigation System.[2] As there was water deficiency in the Kodayar Irrigation System, Perunchani Dam was constructed in December 1952 to store flood water of the Paralayar River as an extension. It was built about 1km (01miles) upstream of the Puthen dam on the Paralayar River. The irrigation system became operational on 2 September 1953. It feeds the left bank irrigation canal system of the Puthen dam, which is the terminal structure of the system.[3]
The dam is built between two hillocks (part of the Western Ghats) across the Paralayar River, a tributary of the Tamaraparani River, also known locally as the Kuzhithuraiar, and is part of the basin that constitutes the west-flowing rivers from Tadri to Kanyakumari. Tamaraparani River rises in the Western Ghats and flows through a distance of 56km (35miles) before debouching into the Arabian Sea. The catchment area at the Perunchani Dam site is 158.4km2. The reservoir is thickly forested and inhabited by wild animals such as tiger, elephants, and deer. The tribal community of Kanikars resides around the periphery of the reservoir.[3] [4] [5] The dam is located about 43km (27miles) from Nagercoil, the administrative headquarters-town of Kanyakumari District, and about 10km (10miles) from the town of Kulasekharam.[3] [4]
The average annual rainfall in the catchment is 2240mm, and the average annual yield at the dam site is 218000000m2.
The dam was constructed between 1948 and 1953 by the then State of Travancore-Cochin.[4] The height of the straight gravity masonry dam above the deepest foundation is 36.27m (119feet), with Full Reservoir Level (FRL) at 93.3m (306.1feet), which is also the Maximum Water Level (MWL). The dam is 308m (1,010feet) long. The gross storage capacity of the reservoir is 818400000m2 at the FRL, which is also the effective storage capacity. The reservoir area is 9620ha. The spillway, with its crest at 88.7m (291feet), is designed to pass a discharge of 894.91m2 per second. There are four spillway gate openings, each 12.19mx4.57mm (39.99feetx14.99feetm) in size. The total volume of material content in the dam is 51000m2. The project lies in Seismic Zone-III.[6] The dam is provided with drainage gallery of 45.7m (149.9feet) length in the central section of the river. It serves the purpose of collecting seepage water from the foundation of the dam and also as an inspection gallery, and measures 1.52mx2.29mm (04.99feetx07.51feetm).[4]
The fishing operation in the reservoir is limited to the indigenous Puntus spp.
The dam is part of the Kodiyar Irrigation System, as its stored waters are utilized only through a combined canal system which provides irrigation to a total command area of 36836ha. The irrigation system consists of four dams and associated storage reservoirs, anicuts, and canal system.[2] The first project to be implemented under this system was the Pechiparai dam, built during 1948–53; the Kodiyar Left Bank Canal (KLBC) taking off from this dam feeds the Puthen dam, which is a weir that was remodeled under World Bank assistance during the 2000s. The next two dams to be built were the Chittar dam I and Chittar dam II in the period from 1964 to 1970; the storage waters of these two reservoirs were also fed into the KLBC. The storage from the Perunchani reservoir is also fed into the Puthen weir.[2]
During the period 1964-70 the storage capacity of the Pachipprai and Parunchani dams was increased by raising the full reservoir level by 1.83m (06feet); this involved rising, strengthening, and improvement measures. The KLBC, which was originally designed to carry a discharge of 24.07m2 per second, was remodeled in 1965 to carry a discharge of 32.99m2 per second. There is a small branch canal taking off from the KLBC, before it joins the Puthen weir, which has an irrigation command of 6073ha.[2] [7] The interlinking of the Perunchani and Chittar dams provides an additional irrigation potential of in the system.