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Robert-Bourassa generating station

The Robert-Bourassa generating station, formerly known as La Grande-2 (LG-2), is a hydroelectric power station on the La Grande River that is part of Hydro-Québec's James Bay Project in Canada. The station can generate 5,616 MW and its 16 units were gradually commissioned between 1979 and 1981.[1] Annual generation is in the vicinity of 26500 GWh.[2]

Robert-Bourassa generating station
Official nameCentrale Robert-Bourassa
LocationBaie-James, Quebec, Canada
Coordinates53°47′43″N 77°26′26″W / 53.79528°N 77.44056°W / 53.79528; -77.44056
Construction began1974
Opening date1981
Construction costC$3.8 billion (1987)
Owner(s)Hydro-Québec
Dam and spillways
Type of damEmbankment dam
ImpoundsLa Grande River
Height162 m (531 ft)
Length2,835 m (9,301 ft)
Width (crest)9 m (30 ft)
Spillway capacity17,600 m3/s (621,538 cu ft/s)
Reservoir
CreatesRobert-Bourassa Reservoir
Total capacity61.7 km3 (50,000,000 acre⋅ft)
Surface area2,835 km2 (1,095 sq mi)
Power Station
Hydraulic head137.2 m (450 ft)
Turbines16 × 351 MW
Francis turbines
Installed capacity5,616 MW
Capacity factor63%
Annual generation31,000 GWh (110,000 TJ)
Sources:
* Société d'énergie de la Baie James 1987, pp. 117–180, 370*Hydro-Québec, The La Grande Complex visitor booklet, 2004, ISBN 2-550-41276-1

Together with the adjacent 2,106 MW La Grande-2-A generating station (LG-2-A), commissioned in 1991–1992, it uses the reservoir and dam system of the Robert-Bourassa Reservoir to generate electricity. The two plants taken together account for more than 20% of Hydro-Québec's total installed capacity of 36,810 MW in 2009.[1] It is Canada's largest hydroelectric power station, ranks in 12th place on the list of largest hydroelectric power stations and is the world's largest underground power station.[3]

Initially known as La Grande-2, it was renamed after Robert Bourassa who, as Premier of Quebec (1970–1976 and 1985–1994) gave the James Bay Project a vital political impetus.

Context edit

The Robert-Bourassa generating station is the main facility of the James Bay hydroelectric project, a large hydroelectric complex built on the La Grande River, a large river in Quebec's sparsely populated northern Quebec. It was also the first to be built, between 1974 and 1981. It was inaugurated by Premier René Lévesque of Quebec, on October 27, 1979.

Conception work on the generating station, dam and reservoir began in October 1970 when Montreal-based engineering firm Rousseau Sauvé Warren (RSW) was given by Hydro-Québec to make the case for the development of the La Grande River. Another engineering firm, Asselin, Benoît, Boucher, Ducharme & Lapointe (ABBDL) was tasked with a feasibility study on the more southerly NBR (Nottaway, Broadback, Rupert) concept. At RSW the development of the La Grande River was championed by François Rousseau, one of firm's associates and a former Hydro-Québec senior engineer.[4]

A final decision to build the hydroelectric complex on the La Grande hydrographic system was made in 1972, after engineers determined the NBR project would be less cost effective because of the silty nature of the soils in the NBR area. The La Grande option had the added advantages of a lesser impact on First Nations hunting and fishing, on the boreal forest and would require less flooding.[5]

Construction edit

The main dam is located 117.5 kilometers (73.0 mi) from the mouth of the river, in the transition zone between the plateau and the coastal plain, and has a maximum height of 162 meters (531 ft). Twenty-nine dykes of various sizes close the reservoir. They are organized in three group: dykes D1-D4 are located north of the spillway, nicknamed the Staircase of the Giants,[6] D5-D14 are located on the left shore of the river while a third group, nicknamed the Duncan dykes (D17-D27), are located 30 kilometers (19 mi) south. The dam and dykes hold a reservoir covering an area of 2,835 square kilometres (1,095 sq mi) with a useful capacity of 19.365 billion m³.[7]

The generating station itself is located 137.2 meters (450 ft) underground, 6 kilometers (3.7 mi) downstream from the main dam. It hosts 16 Francis turbines, set up in two groups of eight each.[7]

In 1974, in what was one of the most extreme cases of workplace sabotage up to that time, workers at the La Grande-2 site used bulldozers to topple electric generators, damage fuel tanks, and set buildings on fire. The project was delayed a year, and the direct cost of the damage estimated at CAD$2 million. The causes were not clear, however three factors have been cited: inter-union rivalry, poor working conditions, and the perceived arrogance of American executives at the contractor, Bechtel Corporation.[8]

Road edit

 
The 274-metre long Eastmain River bridge, one of 12 river crossings built to link the worksite to southern Quebec.[9]

The first step towards the construction of the La Grande-2 generating station took place in June 1971, in Matagami, a small mining town located 630 kilometers (390 mi) south of La Grande River. Engineering firm Desjardins, Sauriol and Associates were tasked with the construction of a basic road to the future site and the Cree settlement at Fort George. The deadline was tight: 450 miles (720 km) in 450 days.[10]

The first challenge involved deploying teams of land surveyors and lumberjacks by seaplanes and helicopters to clear a path for a permanent road. Parallel to the path, a few kilometres away, an ice road was built to move heavy machinery north. The first milestone was reached on February 11, 1972, with the opening of the 555 meters (1,821 ft)[11] ice bridge crossing the Rupert River.[12]

The temporary road reached the La Grande River in December 1972, allowing the minimum necessary level of access needed to begin work – namely to construct housing for the thousands of people who would work on the dam for the next decade. A permanent road surfaced with gravel was completed on October 20, 1974, at a cost of $348 million, and was paved over the next two years.

Temporary diversion edit

The first stage of construction was the temporary diversion of the La Grande River; the tunnels had to be big enough to protect the construction site from floods, but not so large as to unnecessarily increase cost. Two diversion tunnels were drilled into the left bank of the river and were opened on April 27, 1975. For the next three and a half years the flow of the river would be diverted through the tunnels. Each tunnel was 14.8 metres (49 ft) wide and 18 metres (59 ft) high; the north tunnel was 730 metres (2,400 ft) long and the south, 830 metres (2,720 ft). The tunnels were designed to carry the 65-year flood flow of the La Grande River, calculated at 7,500 cubic metres per second (260,000 cu ft/s).

Since the original construction schedule called for completion on February 15, 1980, the south diversion tunnel was scheduled to be closed in November 1978, during low river flows in the winter. However, the deadline was revised forward by 60 days, and the tunnel had to be reinforced to withstand harsh autumn conditions.

After the dam was completed, the tunnels are still used as flood control outlet works and have a design flow of 3,100 cubic metres per second (110,000 cu ft/s).

Dam and dykes edit

 
Spillway (left) and main dam

The Robert-Bourassa dam is located 117.5 kilometres (73.0 mi) from the mouth of the La Grande River, in the transition zone between the Laurentian Plateau (the elevated Canadian Shield) and the coastal plain. It has a maximum height of 162 metres (531 ft) and is 2,836 metres (9,304 ft) long at the crest. The core of the earthfill dam is made of glacial moraine which is impervious, and available in large quantities within a 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) radius of the dam site, due to extensive glaciation of the area during the last ice age. The core is slightly inclined upstream, to increase resistance against the immense pressure of water in the reservoir. The layers above consist of fill zones of varying coarseness, and is surfaced with riprap to reduce erosion.

The original plan envisioned the construction of a concrete-face rock-fill dam, but this was rejected in favor of a more conventional embankment design, partly because of the lower cost, and also because the concrete face would have to be inspected from time to time requiring drainage of the reservoir. Because of the huge size of the reservoir, this would be essentially impossible.

In order to hold the reservoir at its operating height of 175.3 metres (575 ft), 29 dikes surround the reservoir basin at various locations. Dikes D-1 to D-4 are located immediately to the north; D-5 to D-14 (the "Forebay dikes") to the south; and D-17 to D-27 (the "Duncan dikes") about 30 miles (48 km) further south. They range in size from D-26B, 82 metres (269 ft) long, to D-20, 6,052 metres (19,856 ft) long.

Dams and dikes of the Robert-Bourassa development
Type Crest
length
Max.
height
Min. top
width
Excavation
volume
Fill
volume
m ft m ft m ft m3 ft3 m3 ft3
North dikes (D1-D4) 5,278 17,316 50 160 8 26 1,361,000 48,100,000 26,274,000 927,900,000
Main dam 2,836 9,304 162 531 9 30 1,361,000 48,100,000 26,274,000 927,900,000
Forebay dikes (D5-D14) 9,018 29,587 66 217 7.6 25 2,176,000 76,800,000 11,482,000 405,500,000
Duncan dikes (D14-D27) 13,675 44,865 52 171 7.6 25 1,884,000 66,500,000 12,070,000 426,000,000
Total 27,972 91,772 5,421,000 191,400,000 49,826,000 1.7596×109

Reservoir edit

 
The Robert Bourassa Reservoir as seen from space

Covering an area of 2,835 square kilometres (1,095 sq mi) – greater in size than Luxembourg – the vast Robert-Bourassa Reservoir is fed by an upstream catchment of 32,480 square kilometres (12,540 sq mi), plus water diversions from the James Bay Project, the Caniapiscau Reservoir and the EOL (Eastmain-Opinaca-La Grande) diversion project. About 19.365 cubic kilometres (15,699,000 acre⋅ft) is active or usable storage for power generation, out of a total volume of 61.4 cubic kilometres (49,800,000 acre⋅ft). Because of its great size, it is inhabited by a diverse array of aquatic flora and fauna.

On November 27, 1978, the diversion tunnels were closed and water began to back up behind the dam. The enormous reservoir took over a year to completely fill. The water initially rose very fast: 43 metres (141 ft) during the first week, with 15 metres (49 ft) on the first day alone. The reservoir reached its minimum operational level of 167.6 metres (550 ft) on September 2, 1979, and reached its normal maximum level of 175.3 metres (575 ft) in December 1979.

Dessaulniers pump station edit

The construction of the Duncan dikes partially blocked the flow of the Dessaulniers River, which is located to the southeast of the Robert-Bourassa Reservoir. The river flowed into Dessaulniers Lake at an elevation of 143.3 metres (470 ft), 32 metres (105 ft) below the level of the Robert-Bourassa Reservoir. To prevent the flooding of an additional 30 square kilometres (12 sq mi) and preserve the lake in its natural state, a pump station was installed which removes water from the Dessaulniers to the Robert-Bourassa Reservoir. The pump station was designed to remove an annual average of 2.8 cubic metres per second (99 cu ft/s), from a drainage area of 160 square kilometres (62 sq mi).

The pump station was commissioned in June 1977. It has four pumps with a capacity of 1.7 cubic metres per second (60 cu ft/s) each, with a maximum lift of 54.3 metres (178 ft). Each pump is powered by a 1,120 KW (1,500 hp) motor. The pumping station also served to divert water away from the Dessaulniers river bed, during the construction of dike D-20.

Spillway edit

 
Spillway close up view

The spillway, nicknamed Staircase of the Giants, is near the north end of the main dam and is part of dike D-4. It consists of a concrete control structure and a man-made waterfall discharging into a stilling basin below the dam. The spillway has eight 12.2-metre (40 ft) wide gates, separated by 4.3-metre (14 ft) thick columns. The gates are opened and closed by cable winches, in order to control spills. The eight gates are all opened at the same time once every 15 years.[13]

Having passed through the gates, the kinetic energy of the water is dissipated in a 135-by-122-metre (443 ft × 400 ft) basin at the foot of the control structure. It then flows down a 1,500-metre (4,900 ft) long rock channel with a vertical drop of 110-metre (360 ft) on its way back into the La Grande river. The channel has 10 steps ranging from 9.1 to 12.2 metres (30 to 40 ft) in height and 127 to 200 metres (417 to 656 ft) in length. The flow rate increases from 11 metres per second (36 ft/s) at the top of the spillway to 22 metres per second (72 ft/s) at the bottom.

Generating station edit

The Robert-Bourassa hydroelectric station, formerly named La Grande-2 or LG2, is located underground about 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) downstream of the main dam. With an installed capacity of 5,616 megawatts, it is the largest power station owned by Hydro-Québec, and the largest underground power station in the world. On October 27, 1979, 3,000 people gathered for the dedication of the power plant by Quebec Premier René Lévesque.

The underground complex, including a service tunnel, the generation room and a surge chamber, required the excavation of 2,350,000 cubic metres (83,000,000 cu ft) of material. The plant was constructed by Rousseau Sauvé Warren (RSW) of Montreal. Unlike other facilities in the James Bay Project, the LG2 was constructed to imperial rather than metric specifications, even though Canada had converted to the metric system in the 1970s.

The power station can be accessed either by an elevator or a tunnel. The plant has 16 Francis turbines, divided into two sets of eight each, and separated by a mounting area, workshops, control room, elevator shaft and ventilation system.

The turbines were built by two partners of James Bay Energy (SEBJ). Units 1, 3, 5, 7, 10, 12, 14 and 16 were built by Marine Industries Limited (MIL), while units 2, 4, 6, 8, 9, 11, 13 and 15 were built by Canadian General Electric (alternators) and Dominion Engineering Works (turbines). The two groups have somewhat different characteristics. The turbines manufactured by MIL are lighter, 96 tonnes compared to 111, and have fifteen blades, compared to 11 for the other group.

Each turbine is rated at 339 MW at a 137-metre (449 ft) head and a speed of 133.33 rpm. The generators are rated at 370 megavolt amperes (MVA), which is increased to 390 MVA in the winter.

Power station specifications
Facility Soil
excavation
Rock
excavation
Concrete Steel
m3 ft3 m3 ft3 m3 ft3 kg lb
Intake channel 78,000 2,800,000 552,000 19,500,000
Water crane 183,000 6,500,000 81,500 2,880,000 4,200,000 9,300,000
Penstocks 190,000 6,700,000 55,000 1,900,000 960,000 2,120,000
Service tunnel and well 101,000 3,600,000 3,500 120,000 25,000 55,000
Adit 21,000 740,000 175,000 6,200,000 2,500 88,000 3,000 6,600
Transformer station 417,000 14,700,000 530,000 19,000,000 19,000 670,000 711,000 1,567,000
Generator room and ventilation 454,000 16,000,000 127,000 4,500,000 5,951,000 13,120,000
Surge chamber 371,000 13,100,000 12,000 420,000 550,000 1,210,000
Drainage galleries 608,000 21,500,000 1,370,000 48,000,000 500 18,000
Tailrace 114,000 4,000,000 179,000 6,300,000
Total 1,238,000 43,720,000 4,105,000 144,967,000 301,000 10,630,000 12,400,000 27,337,000

La Grande-2-A edit

Photos edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Hydro-Québec Production (2010), Hydroelectric Generating Stations (as of December 31, 2009), Hydro-Québec, from the original on December 13, 2010, retrieved 2010-08-21
  2. ^ Pierre Parent of Hydro-Quebec (2004), Implementing Detailed Efficiency Data for Optimal Use in Hydroelectric Generating Plants (PDF), (PDF) from the original on 2016-03-04, retrieved 2012-09-12
  3. ^ "Centrales - Hydro-Québec Production". www.hydroquebec.com (in French). Retrieved 2024-02-28.
  4. ^ Bolduc 2000, pp. 114–115
  5. ^ Bolduc, Hogue & Larouche 1989, p. 263
  6. ^ Turgeon 1992, p. 111
  7. ^ a b Société d'énergie de la Baie James 1987, p. 117
  8. ^ Rinehart, J.W. The Tyranny of Work, Canadian Social Problems Series. Academic Press Canada (1975), pp. 78-79. ISBN 0-7747-3029-3. See also Auf Der Maur, in Further Reading.
  9. ^ Société d'énergie de la Baie James 1987, p. 54
  10. ^ Lacasse 1983, pp. 242–246
  11. ^ Société d'énergie de la Baie James 1987, p. 58
  12. ^ Lacasse 1983, pp. 257
  13. ^ "Opening of the spillway gates at Robert-Bourassa generating station". YouTube.

Works cited edit

  • Bolduc, André; Hogue, Clarence; Larouche, Daniel (1989), Hydro-Québec, l'hértitage d'un siècle d'électricité (in French) (third ed.), Montreal: Libre-Expression / Forces, ISBN 2-89111-388-8 (also available in English, under the title Hydro-Québec After 100 Years of Electricity)
  • Bolduc, André (2000), Du génie au pouvoir : Robert A. Boyd, à la gouverne d'Hydro-Québec aux années glorieuses (in French), Montreal: Libre Expression, ISBN 2-89111-829-4.
  • Lacasse, Roger (1983), Baie James, une épopée, Montreal: Libre Expression, ISBN 2-89111-109-5.
  • Société d'énergie de la Baie James (1987), Complexe hydroélectrique de la Grande-Rivière. Réalisation de la première phase (in French), Montreal: Société d'énergie de la Baie James/Éditions de la Chenelière, ISBN 2-89310-010-4.
  • Turgeon, Pierre (1992), La Radissonie, le pays de la baie James (in French), Montreal: Libre expression, ISBN 2-89111-502-3.

External links edit

  • Hydro-Québec - Robert-Bourassa Generating Facility

robert, bourassa, generating, station, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, french, july, 2011, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, transl. LG 2 redirects here For other uses see LG2 disambiguation You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French July 2011 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the French article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 6 207 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at fr Amenagement Robert Bourassa see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated fr Amenagement Robert Bourassa to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Robert Bourassa generating station formerly known as La Grande 2 LG 2 is a hydroelectric power station on the La Grande River that is part of Hydro Quebec s James Bay Project in Canada The station can generate 5 616 MW and its 16 units were gradually commissioned between 1979 and 1981 1 Annual generation is in the vicinity of 26500 GWh 2 Robert Bourassa generating stationOfficial nameCentrale Robert BourassaLocationBaie James Quebec CanadaCoordinates53 47 43 N 77 26 26 W 53 79528 N 77 44056 W 53 79528 77 44056Construction began1974Opening date1981Construction costC 3 8 billion 1987 Owner s Hydro QuebecDam and spillwaysType of damEmbankment damImpoundsLa Grande RiverHeight162 m 531 ft Length2 835 m 9 301 ft Width crest 9 m 30 ft Spillway capacity17 600 m3 s 621 538 cu ft s ReservoirCreatesRobert Bourassa ReservoirTotal capacity61 7 km3 50 000 000 acre ft Surface area2 835 km2 1 095 sq mi Power StationHydraulic head137 2 m 450 ft Turbines16 351 MWFrancis turbinesInstalled capacity5 616 MWCapacity factor63 Annual generation31 000 GWh 110 000 TJ Sources Societe d energie de la Baie James 1987 pp 117 180 370 Hydro Quebec The La Grande Complex visitor booklet 2004 ISBN 2 550 41276 1 Together with the adjacent 2 106 MW La Grande 2 A generating station LG 2 A commissioned in 1991 1992 it uses the reservoir and dam system of the Robert Bourassa Reservoir to generate electricity The two plants taken together account for more than 20 of Hydro Quebec s total installed capacity of 36 810 MW in 2009 1 It is Canada s largest hydroelectric power station ranks in 12th place on the list of largest hydroelectric power stations and is the world s largest underground power station 3 Initially known as La Grande 2 it was renamed after Robert Bourassa who as Premier of Quebec 1970 1976 and 1985 1994 gave the James Bay Project a vital political impetus Contents 1 Context 2 Construction 2 1 Road 2 2 Temporary diversion 2 3 Dam and dykes 2 4 Reservoir 2 4 1 Dessaulniers pump station 2 5 Spillway 2 6 Generating station 2 7 La Grande 2 A 3 Photos 4 See also 5 References 6 Works cited 7 External linksContext editMain article James Bay Project The Robert Bourassa generating station is the main facility of the James Bay hydroelectric project a large hydroelectric complex built on the La Grande River a large river in Quebec s sparsely populated northern Quebec It was also the first to be built between 1974 and 1981 It was inaugurated by Premier Rene Levesque of Quebec on October 27 1979 Conception work on the generating station dam and reservoir began in October 1970 when Montreal based engineering firm Rousseau Sauve Warren RSW was given by Hydro Quebec to make the case for the development of the La Grande River Another engineering firm Asselin Benoit Boucher Ducharme amp Lapointe ABBDL was tasked with a feasibility study on the more southerly NBR Nottaway Broadback Rupert concept At RSW the development of the La Grande River was championed by Francois Rousseau one of firm s associates and a former Hydro Quebec senior engineer 4 A final decision to build the hydroelectric complex on the La Grande hydrographic system was made in 1972 after engineers determined the NBR project would be less cost effective because of the silty nature of the soils in the NBR area The La Grande option had the added advantages of a lesser impact on First Nations hunting and fishing on the boreal forest and would require less flooding 5 Construction editThe main dam is located 117 5 kilometers 73 0 mi from the mouth of the river in the transition zone between the plateau and the coastal plain and has a maximum height of 162 meters 531 ft Twenty nine dykes of various sizes close the reservoir They are organized in three group dykes D1 D4 are located north of the spillway nicknamed the Staircase of the Giants 6 D5 D14 are located on the left shore of the river while a third group nicknamed the Duncan dykes D17 D27 are located 30 kilometers 19 mi south The dam and dykes hold a reservoir covering an area of 2 835 square kilometres 1 095 sq mi with a useful capacity of 19 365 billion m 7 The generating station itself is located 137 2 meters 450 ft underground 6 kilometers 3 7 mi downstream from the main dam It hosts 16 Francis turbines set up in two groups of eight each 7 In 1974 in what was one of the most extreme cases of workplace sabotage up to that time workers at the La Grande 2 site used bulldozers to topple electric generators damage fuel tanks and set buildings on fire The project was delayed a year and the direct cost of the damage estimated at CAD 2 million The causes were not clear however three factors have been cited inter union rivalry poor working conditions and the perceived arrogance of American executives at the contractor Bechtel Corporation 8 Road edit Main article James Bay Road nbsp The 274 metre long Eastmain River bridge one of 12 river crossings built to link the worksite to southern Quebec 9 The first step towards the construction of the La Grande 2 generating station took place in June 1971 in Matagami a small mining town located 630 kilometers 390 mi south of La Grande River Engineering firm Desjardins Sauriol and Associates were tasked with the construction of a basic road to the future site and the Cree settlement at Fort George The deadline was tight 450 miles 720 km in 450 days 10 The first challenge involved deploying teams of land surveyors and lumberjacks by seaplanes and helicopters to clear a path for a permanent road Parallel to the path a few kilometres away an ice road was built to move heavy machinery north The first milestone was reached on February 11 1972 with the opening of the 555 meters 1 821 ft 11 ice bridge crossing the Rupert River 12 The temporary road reached the La Grande River in December 1972 allowing the minimum necessary level of access needed to begin work namely to construct housing for the thousands of people who would work on the dam for the next decade A permanent road surfaced with gravel was completed on October 20 1974 at a cost of 348 million and was paved over the next two years Temporary diversion edit The first stage of construction was the temporary diversion of the La Grande River the tunnels had to be big enough to protect the construction site from floods but not so large as to unnecessarily increase cost Two diversion tunnels were drilled into the left bank of the river and were opened on April 27 1975 For the next three and a half years the flow of the river would be diverted through the tunnels Each tunnel was 14 8 metres 49 ft wide and 18 metres 59 ft high the north tunnel was 730 metres 2 400 ft long and the south 830 metres 2 720 ft The tunnels were designed to carry the 65 year flood flow of the La Grande River calculated at 7 500 cubic metres per second 260 000 cu ft s Since the original construction schedule called for completion on February 15 1980 the south diversion tunnel was scheduled to be closed in November 1978 during low river flows in the winter However the deadline was revised forward by 60 days and the tunnel had to be reinforced to withstand harsh autumn conditions After the dam was completed the tunnels are still used as flood control outlet works and have a design flow of 3 100 cubic metres per second 110 000 cu ft s Dam and dykes edit nbsp Spillway left and main dam The Robert Bourassa dam is located 117 5 kilometres 73 0 mi from the mouth of the La Grande River in the transition zone between the Laurentian Plateau the elevated Canadian Shield and the coastal plain It has a maximum height of 162 metres 531 ft and is 2 836 metres 9 304 ft long at the crest The core of the earthfill dam is made of glacial moraine which is impervious and available in large quantities within a 10 kilometres 6 2 mi radius of the dam site due to extensive glaciation of the area during the last ice age The core is slightly inclined upstream to increase resistance against the immense pressure of water in the reservoir The layers above consist of fill zones of varying coarseness and is surfaced with riprap to reduce erosion The original plan envisioned the construction of a concrete face rock fill dam but this was rejected in favor of a more conventional embankment design partly because of the lower cost and also because the concrete face would have to be inspected from time to time requiring drainage of the reservoir Because of the huge size of the reservoir this would be essentially impossible In order to hold the reservoir at its operating height of 175 3 metres 575 ft 29 dikes surround the reservoir basin at various locations Dikes D 1 to D 4 are located immediately to the north D 5 to D 14 the Forebay dikes to the south and D 17 to D 27 the Duncan dikes about 30 miles 48 km further south They range in size from D 26B 82 metres 269 ft long to D 20 6 052 metres 19 856 ft long Dams and dikes of the Robert Bourassa development Type Crestlength Max height Min topwidth Excavationvolume Fillvolume m ft m ft m ft m3 ft3 m3 ft3 North dikes D1 D4 5 278 17 316 50 160 8 26 1 361 000 48 100 000 26 274 000 927 900 000 Main dam 2 836 9 304 162 531 9 30 1 361 000 48 100 000 26 274 000 927 900 000 Forebay dikes D5 D14 9 018 29 587 66 217 7 6 25 2 176 000 76 800 000 11 482 000 405 500 000 Duncan dikes D14 D27 13 675 44 865 52 171 7 6 25 1 884 000 66 500 000 12 070 000 426 000 000 Total 27 972 91 772 5 421 000 191 400 000 49 826 000 1 7596 109 Reservoir edit nbsp The Robert Bourassa Reservoir as seen from space Covering an area of 2 835 square kilometres 1 095 sq mi greater in size than Luxembourg the vast Robert Bourassa Reservoir is fed by an upstream catchment of 32 480 square kilometres 12 540 sq mi plus water diversions from the James Bay Project the Caniapiscau Reservoir and the EOL Eastmain Opinaca La Grande diversion project About 19 365 cubic kilometres 15 699 000 acre ft is active or usable storage for power generation out of a total volume of 61 4 cubic kilometres 49 800 000 acre ft Because of its great size it is inhabited by a diverse array of aquatic flora and fauna On November 27 1978 the diversion tunnels were closed and water began to back up behind the dam The enormous reservoir took over a year to completely fill The water initially rose very fast 43 metres 141 ft during the first week with 15 metres 49 ft on the first day alone The reservoir reached its minimum operational level of 167 6 metres 550 ft on September 2 1979 and reached its normal maximum level of 175 3 metres 575 ft in December 1979 Dessaulniers pump station edit The construction of the Duncan dikes partially blocked the flow of the Dessaulniers River which is located to the southeast of the Robert Bourassa Reservoir The river flowed into Dessaulniers Lake at an elevation of 143 3 metres 470 ft 32 metres 105 ft below the level of the Robert Bourassa Reservoir To prevent the flooding of an additional 30 square kilometres 12 sq mi and preserve the lake in its natural state a pump station was installed which removes water from the Dessaulniers to the Robert Bourassa Reservoir The pump station was designed to remove an annual average of 2 8 cubic metres per second 99 cu ft s from a drainage area of 160 square kilometres 62 sq mi The pump station was commissioned in June 1977 It has four pumps with a capacity of 1 7 cubic metres per second 60 cu ft s each with a maximum lift of 54 3 metres 178 ft Each pump is powered by a 1 120 KW 1 500 hp motor The pumping station also served to divert water away from the Dessaulniers river bed during the construction of dike D 20 Spillway edit nbsp Spillway close up view The spillway nicknamed Staircase of the Giants is near the north end of the main dam and is part of dike D 4 It consists of a concrete control structure and a man made waterfall discharging into a stilling basin below the dam The spillway has eight 12 2 metre 40 ft wide gates separated by 4 3 metre 14 ft thick columns The gates are opened and closed by cable winches in order to control spills The eight gates are all opened at the same time once every 15 years 13 Having passed through the gates the kinetic energy of the water is dissipated in a 135 by 122 metre 443 ft 400 ft basin at the foot of the control structure It then flows down a 1 500 metre 4 900 ft long rock channel with a vertical drop of 110 metre 360 ft on its way back into the La Grande river The channel has 10 steps ranging from 9 1 to 12 2 metres 30 to 40 ft in height and 127 to 200 metres 417 to 656 ft in length The flow rate increases from 11 metres per second 36 ft s at the top of the spillway to 22 metres per second 72 ft s at the bottom Generating station edit The Robert Bourassa hydroelectric station formerly named La Grande 2 or LG2 is located underground about 6 kilometres 3 7 mi downstream of the main dam With an installed capacity of 5 616 megawatts it is the largest power station owned by Hydro Quebec and the largest underground power station in the world On October 27 1979 3 000 people gathered for the dedication of the power plant by Quebec Premier Rene Levesque The underground complex including a service tunnel the generation room and a surge chamber required the excavation of 2 350 000 cubic metres 83 000 000 cu ft of material The plant was constructed by Rousseau Sauve Warren RSW of Montreal Unlike other facilities in the James Bay Project the LG2 was constructed to imperial rather than metric specifications even though Canada had converted to the metric system in the 1970s The power station can be accessed either by an elevator or a tunnel The plant has 16 Francis turbines divided into two sets of eight each and separated by a mounting area workshops control room elevator shaft and ventilation system The turbines were built by two partners of James Bay Energy SEBJ Units 1 3 5 7 10 12 14 and 16 were built by Marine Industries Limited MIL while units 2 4 6 8 9 11 13 and 15 were built by Canadian General Electric alternators and Dominion Engineering Works turbines The two groups have somewhat different characteristics The turbines manufactured by MIL are lighter 96 tonnes compared to 111 and have fifteen blades compared to 11 for the other group Each turbine is rated at 339 MW at a 137 metre 449 ft head and a speed of 133 33 rpm The generators are rated at 370 megavolt amperes MVA which is increased to 390 MVA in the winter Power station specifications Facility Soilexcavation Rockexcavation Concrete Steel m3 ft3 m3 ft3 m3 ft3 kg lb Intake channel 78 000 2 800 000 552 000 19 500 000 Water crane 183 000 6 500 000 81 500 2 880 000 4 200 000 9 300 000 Penstocks 190 000 6 700 000 55 000 1 900 000 960 000 2 120 000 Service tunnel and well 101 000 3 600 000 3 500 120 000 25 000 55 000 Adit 21 000 740 000 175 000 6 200 000 2 500 88 000 3 000 6 600 Transformer station 417 000 14 700 000 530 000 19 000 000 19 000 670 000 711 000 1 567 000 Generator room and ventilation 454 000 16 000 000 127 000 4 500 000 5 951 000 13 120 000 Surge chamber 371 000 13 100 000 12 000 420 000 550 000 1 210 000 Drainage galleries 608 000 21 500 000 1 370 000 48 000 000 500 18 000 Tailrace 114 000 4 000 000 179 000 6 300 000 Total 1 238 000 43 720 000 4 105 000 144 967 000 301 000 10 630 000 12 400 000 27 337 000 La Grande 2 A edit Main article La Grande 2 A generating station This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2010 Photos edit nbsp Main entrance of the underground generating station nbsp The Robert Bourassa Reservoir near the generating station nbsp Electric transformers at the plant s switchyard See also edit nbsp Canada portal nbsp Water portal nbsp Renewable energy portal List of largest power stations in Canada List of conventional hydroelectric power stations List of hydroelectric stations in Quebec Reservoirs and dams in CanadaReferences edit a b Hydro Quebec Production 2010 Hydroelectric Generating Stations as of December 31 2009 Hydro Quebec archived from the original on December 13 2010 retrieved 2010 08 21 Pierre Parent of Hydro Quebec 2004 Implementing Detailed Efficiency Data for Optimal Use in Hydroelectric Generating Plants PDF archived PDF from the original on 2016 03 04 retrieved 2012 09 12 Centrales Hydro Quebec Production www hydroquebec com in French Retrieved 2024 02 28 Bolduc 2000 pp 114 115 Bolduc Hogue amp Larouche 1989 p 263 Turgeon 1992 p 111 a b Societe d energie de la Baie James 1987 p 117 Rinehart J W The Tyranny of Work Canadian Social Problems Series Academic Press Canada 1975 pp 78 79 ISBN 0 7747 3029 3 See also Auf Der Maur in Further Reading Societe d energie de la Baie James 1987 p 54 Lacasse 1983 pp 242 246 Societe d energie de la Baie James 1987 p 58 Lacasse 1983 pp 257 Opening of the spillway gates at Robert Bourassa generating station YouTube Works cited editBolduc Andre Hogue Clarence Larouche Daniel 1989 Hydro Quebec l hertitage d un siecle d electricite in French third ed Montreal Libre Expression Forces ISBN 2 89111 388 8 also available in English under the title Hydro Quebec After 100 Years of Electricity Bolduc Andre 2000 Du genie au pouvoir Robert A Boyd a la gouverne d Hydro Quebec aux annees glorieuses in French Montreal Libre Expression ISBN 2 89111 829 4 Lacasse Roger 1983 Baie James une epopee Montreal Libre Expression ISBN 2 89111 109 5 Societe d energie de la Baie James 1987 Complexe hydroelectrique de la Grande Riviere Realisation de la premiere phase in French Montreal Societe d energie de la Baie James Editions de la Cheneliere ISBN 2 89310 010 4 Turgeon Pierre 1992 La Radissonie le pays de la baie James in French Montreal Libre expression ISBN 2 89111 502 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Amenagement Robert Bourassa Hydro Quebec Robert Bourassa Generating Facility Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Bourassa generating station amp oldid 1210783010, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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