The Tods Corner Power Station is a pumped-storage[2] hydroelectric power station located in the Central Highlands region of Tasmania, Australia. The power station is situated on the Great Lake and South Esk catchment and is owned and operated by Hydro Tasmania.
Arthurs Lake Dam | |
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Location of the Miena Rockfill Dam in Tasmania | |
Country | Australia |
Location | Central Highlands Tasmania |
Coordinates | 41°59′24″S 146°54′36″E / 41.99000°S 146.91000°E |
Purpose | Power |
Status | Operational |
Opening date | 1965 |
Owner(s) | Hydro Tasmania |
Dam and spillways | |
Type of dam | Embankment dam |
Impounds | Lake River |
Height | 17 metres (56 ft) |
Length | 482 metres (1,581 ft) |
Dam volume | 113 thousand cubic metres (4.0×10 6 cu ft) |
Spillways | 1 |
Spillway type | Controlled and uncontrolled |
Spillway capacity | 43 cubic metres per second (1,500 cu ft/s) |
Reservoir | |
Creates | Arthurs Lake |
Total capacity | 511,390 megalitres (18,060×10 6 cu ft) |
Catchment area | 259 square kilometres (100 sq mi) |
Surface area | 645.9 hectares (1,596 acres) |
Tods Corner Power Station | |
Coordinates | 41°57′00″S 146°46′48″E / 41.95000°S 146.78000°E |
Operator(s) | Hydro Tasmania |
Commission date | 1 January 1966 |
Type | Pumped-storage |
Hydraulic head | 41 metres (135 ft) |
Turbines | 1 x 1.7 MW (2,300 hp) Maier Francis-type turbine |
Installed capacity | 1.7 megawatts (2,300 hp) |
Annual generation | 8 gigawatt-hours (29 TJ) |
Website hydro | |
[1] |
Technical details
editLocated in the Great Lake and South Esk catchment area, the Tods Corner Power Station was developed to recover the available energy from the water out of the Arthurs Lake Pumping Station. In order to increase the size of the reservoir at the Great Lake, and increase the water available to the important Waddamana Power Stations, Arthurs Lake was created in the 1920s with the damming of several creeks and water was pumped from it into the Great Lake as required by the station. With the construction of the much larger Poatina Power Station in 1966 to replace Waddamana, Tods Corner was added to recover some of the energy used by the pump systems. The power station is located on the south-eastern shore of Great Lake and is supplied with water via a 105-metre (344 ft)-long penstock connected to an open flume which carries the discharge from Arthurs Lake Pumping Station.[3]
Commissioned in 1966 by the Hydro Electric Corporation (TAS), the station has a single Maier Francis-type turbine with capacity of 1.7 megawatts (2,300 hp) coupled to a Siemens induction generator.[4] The station output, estimated at 8 gigawatt-hours (29 TJ) annually,[1] is fed to TasNetworks' transmission grid at its output voltage of 6.6 kV via a circuit breaker located in the exterior switchyard.[4]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "Register of Large Dams in Australia". Dams information. Australian National Committee on Large Dams. 2010. Archived from the original (Excel (requires download)) on 12 December 2013. Retrieved 23 June 2015.
- ^ "Tods Corner Power Station" (PDF). DOE Energy Storage Database. Sandia National Laboratories. 30 November 2013. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
- ^ "Tods Corner Power Station". Our power stations: Great Lake - South Esk. Hydro Tasmania. 2015. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
- ^ a b "Tods Corner Power Station" (PDF). Our power stations: Great Lake - South Esk. Hydro Tasmania. Retrieved 6 July 2015.