Hunt on for more dams on Clutha
By Che Baker, on Wednesday 13 April 2011
The Southland Times
Contact Energy has started geotechnical investigations for an 86-megawatt hydro dam on the Clutha River at Luggate, a project that has been slammed by environmental groups.
Project manager Neil Gillespie said Contact Energy was investigating a possible site at "The Nook", 2km downstream from the Luggate bridge where the Luggate Creek meets the Clutha River.
Devil's Nook, proposed dam site
Digging work had been completed and, after Easter, a drilling rig was expected to be on site to drill bore holes and take geological samples of the area.
Geologists would prepare a report on the site, where a low height, 25m-tall dam was proposed, that would be presented to Contact.
If built, the dam would create a 350-hectare lake that would extend 15km up the Clutha Valley to near Albert Town.
It was estimated the power station, likely to be remotely controlled from Contact Energy's Clyde control centre, would have a capacity of 86MW and capable of generating about 500 GWh of electricity a year. It was expected to take four years to build.
Luggate was one of four possible options Contact was considering for hydro development on the Clutha River.
Geological data had been collected in "much greater detail" at the three other sites at Queensberry, Beaumont and Tuapeka Mouth but "no decision had yet to be made on a preferred development option", Mr Gillespie said.
The data gathered would give Contact a greater insight and understanding on the design and construction requirements at the site and would contribute to the overall assessment of future hydro options along the river, he said.
It was a "complex task" to build a dam and many factors including economic, community and environment costs would need to be considered in each scheme before a decision could be made, he said.
"We want to gain a comparable level of information for all four possible future options.".
The geological report was due to be completed next month.
Contact Energy started meeting Central Otago leaders in 2008 to gauge support for hydro plans after it announced it was looking at several "historic options" on the upper and lower Clutha at Queensberry and Luggate, and Tuapeka and Beaumont.
Yesterday, Lewis Verduyn, chairman of the Clutha River Forum, an alliance of environmental groups opposed to further dams on the river, said the proposal was "too destructive, too backward thinking, and too problematic".
The dam would be sited on top of "the most noticed feature" of the Upper Clutha, the Devil's Nook switchback, which was one of the rarest river features in the world.
Mr Verduyn said New Zealand had no place for more large dams as they could not provide a sustainable, reliable and expandable energy solution and other options, such as Cook Strait marine power, needed to be looked into.
FOUR HYDRO OPTIONS
Hydro options investigated by Contact Energy along the Clutha River:
Luggate
Type: Dam
Construction: Four years
Capacity: 86MW (megawatts)
Annual output: 500GWh (gigawatt hours)
Dam height above ground: 25m
Dam length at crest: 820m
Reservoir lake area: 350ha Number of turbines: 3
Queensberry
Type: Dam and canal
Construction: Four to five years
Capacity: 160MW
Annual output: 850GWh
Dam height above ground: 14m
Dam length at crest: 880m
Reservoir lake area: 240ha
Number of turbines: 2 + 1
Beaumont
Type: Dam
Construction: Four to five years
Capacity: 185MW
Annual output: 1070GWh
Dam height above ground: 30m
Dam length at crest: 350m
Reservoir lake area: 1100ha
Number of turbines: 4
Tuapeka Mouth
Type: Dam
Construction: Five years
Capacity: 350MW
Annual output: 1950GWh
Dam height above ground: 50m
Dam length at crest: 520m
Reservoir lake area: 3200ha
Number of turbines: 4
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