fbpx
Wikipedia

Turlough Hill Power Station

The Turlough Hill Power Station is a pumped storage power station in Ireland, owned and operated by the Electricity Supply Board (ESB).[1]

Turlough Hill Pumped-Storage Scheme
Lough Nahanagan, the lower reservoir
Location of Turlough Hill Pumped-Storage Scheme in Ireland
Coordinates53°01′43″N 6°24′23″W / 53.02861°N 6.40639°W / 53.02861; -6.40639
PurposePower
StatusOperational
Construction began1968 (55 years ago) (1968)
Opening date1974 (49 years ago) (1974)
Construction costIEP £22 million
Owner(s)ESB Group
Upper reservoir
CreatesTurlough Hill
Total capacity2,300,000 cubic metres (81,000,000 cu ft)
Surface area160,000 square metres (1,700,000 sq ft)
Maximum water depth19.4 metres (64 ft)
Lower reservoir
CreatesLough Nahanagan
Power Station
TypePumped-storage
Hydraulic head286 metres (937.5 ft)
Pump-generators4 x 73 MW (98,000 hp)
Installed capacity292 MW (392,000 hp)
Overall efficiency75%
Storage capacity6 hours
Website
www.esb.ie/our-businesses/generation-energy-trading-new/generation-asset-map#turlough-hill

Like all pumped-storage hydroelectric schemes, it makes use of two water reservoirs connected by a pressure tunnel: in this case an artificial reservoir near the summit of the mountain and the naturally occurring corrie lake, Lough Nahanagan, at the foot of the mountain.[2] Water is pumped up from the lower reservoir to the upper reservoir, using surplus power available at times of low demand, and then allowed to fall by gravity from the upper reservoir back into the lower reservoir, passing through turbines along the way to generate electricity.[3] The generating plant resides inside the mountain in a cavern measuring 250×70×90 feet (76×21×27 metres),[2] which houses four reversible pump turbines with a combined capacity of 292 megawatts.[4] The upper reservoir is 19.4 metres (64 feet) deep, has a capacity of 2.3 million cubic metres (81 million cubic feet) and covers an area of 160,000 square metres (40 acres).[4][5] The power station is designed to generate electricity at times of peak demand and is instantly dispatchable: it can go from standstill to full generation within 70 seconds, compared with 12 hours for some thermal plants.[6] It can generate electricity at full load for up to six hours per day and has a round trip energy efficiency of 75%. Since 2004, Turlough Hill has been the Hydro Control Centre (HCC) for the entire ESB hydroelectric portfolio, which comprises 19 generators in total.[1] An overhaul of the plant was planned for 2011 following the failure of Unit 1's stator bars.[7] A subsequent investigation led to serious defects being discovered, which led to the refurbishment of all four generating units.[8]

History edit

Turlough Hill was first conceived by Dermot O'Riordan, Deputy Chief Engineer in the ESB's Civil Engineering Department.[9] In 1964, ESB engineers visited several locations in the Wicklow Mountains, digging trial pits and boreholes, looking for suitable sites for a pumped-storage station.[10] A shortlist of three proposals was drawn up by O'Riordan: an artificial upper reservoir at the summit of Tonduff mountain with an artificial lower reservoir in the Glencree valley; an upper reservoir using Lough Ouler, a natural corrie lake near the summit of Tonelagee mountain, with an artificial lower reservoir in the Glenmacnass valley; and an artificial upper reservoir at Turlough Hill with Lough Nahanagan as lower reservoir.[11]

The Turlough Hill site was chosen as the best of these options and work commenced on the scheme in 1968. The cost was estimated at IEP £12 million.[12] A loan of £6 million was secured from the World Bank to partially finance the project.[13] Contracts worth £2 million were signed with Karlstad Mekaniska Werkstad for four reversible pump turbines and with Siemens for four 73 megawatt generators in 1969.[14] The contracts for the civil engineering works were awarded to two German consortia: Beuscher-Teerbau for the upper reservoir and Alfred Kunz & Co. for the underground works in the lower reservoir.[15]

Concerns about the impact of the scheme on the scenery at the Wicklow Gap led to ESB, whose chairman and chief executive at the time, Tom Murray, was an enthusiastic supporter of the project, engaging the services of landscape architect Sylvia Crowe.[12] She recommended that the upper reservoir be camouflaged by planting vegetation on its embankments and that the works on the lower reservoir at Lough Nahanagan be designed to fit into the background of rock.[12] The siting of the transmission lines that would connect Turlough Hill to the electrical grid was a matter of some controversy. Objections to the lines, planned to run from Turlough Hill to the village of Hollywood, came from several quarters, including Bord Fáilte, the Irish tourist board.[16] In the end, it was decided that they would run underground from Turlough Hill for c. 1 mile (1.6 kilometres), to preserve the view at the Wicklow Gap, before emerging overground on pylons along the King's River to Hollywood.[5] This added £600,000 to the cost of the project.[17]

At their peak, the construction works employed over 500 personnel: many of the workers lived in a temporary camp adjacent to the site, which provided food and lodgings.[18] During the initial exploratory works, a geological fault was discovered inside the mountain and the location of the cavern housing the generating plant had to be altered.[19] 1,400 pounds (640 kilograms) of gelignite were stolen from the site in an armed raid in 1972.[20] Archaeological investigations near the Wicklow Gap during construction uncovered part of Saint Kevin's Road, the ancient path that brought pilgrims from Hollywood to the monastery at Glendalough.[21] The first generator went on line in December 1973 and remaining three soon followed.[21] The scheme became fully operational in 1974.[1] At the time of completion, it was the largest civil engineering project ever carried out in Ireland.[4] The final cost of the project was IEP £22 million.[21]

Following the completion of Turlough Hill, the ESB considered a number of sites – in the Wicklow and Comeragh mountains as well as around Lough Derg – for further pumped-storage schemes.[22] However, Turlough Hill remains the only such scheme in Ireland to date, although the Commission for Energy Regulation has approved the construction of a 70MW facility at Knocknagreenan, County Cork.[23]

Name edit

The hill originally did not have a name on the Ordnance Survey map. The engineer who identified the site, J O'Riordan, decided to name the hill after his son Turlough.[24] The name is quite fitting in any case as the pumped storage station draws water from the mountain top lake, which thus becomes a ‘dry lake’. There is a geological feature known as a Turlough; it is defined as "(in Ireland) a low-lying area on limestone which becomes flooded in wet weather through the welling up of groundwater from the rock. ORIGIN late 17th cent.: from Irish turloch, from tur ‘dry’ + loch ‘lake’."[25]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c . ESB Group. Archived from the original on 14 June 2011. Retrieved 22 July 2011.
  2. ^ a b Power, Con (19 January 1971). "Turlough Hill, Co. Wicklow – Working for the Future". The Irish Times. Dublin. p. 16.
  3. ^ "ESB project at Turlough Hill". Irish Independent. Dublin. 22 September 1969. p. 7.
  4. ^ a b c "Turlough Hill a great success". The Irish Press. Dublin. 3 June 1975. p. 6.
  5. ^ a b Fleming, Lionel (25 May 1972). "Turlough Hill". The Irish Times. Dublin. p. 12.
  6. ^ "Something in reserve". The Irish Times. Dublin. 13 September 1977. p. A4.
  7. ^ ESB Group (2011). (PDF). p. 37. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 23 July 2011.
  8. ^ "Turlough Hill Refurbishment Enters Final Stages". ESB Energy International. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
  9. ^ "Sunday Salute". Sunday Independent. Dublin. 5 August 1973. p. 9.
  10. ^ "Power storage tests in mountains". The Irish Times. Dublin. 29 August 1964. p. 15.
  11. ^ Munro, Hugh (4 November 1968). "The development of electricity in Ireland". The Irish Times. Dublin. p. 18.
  12. ^ a b c Kelly, Tony (15 February 1969). "£12m ESB scheme begun in Wicklow". The Irish Times. Dublin. p. 9.
  13. ^ "£6m loan for ESB project". The Irish Times. Dublin. 20 March 1969. p. 1.
  14. ^ "£2m jobs for power plant". The Irish Press. Dublin. 21 June 1969. p. 3.
  15. ^ "Germans share ESB contract". Irish Independent. Dublin. 26 June 1969. p. 1.
  16. ^ Fleming, Lionel (19 May 1970). "ESB power lines in Co. Wicklow. Bord Fáilte objections". The Irish Times. Dublin. p. 11.
  17. ^ "Scenery goes on ESB bill". The Irish Press. Dublin. 6 October 1971. p. 1.
  18. ^ "It's a happy site to work on". Irish Independent. Dublin. 19 May 1970. p. 13.
  19. ^ "The power station inside the mountain". Irish Independent. Dublin. 19 May 1970. p. 13.
  20. ^ "Turlough Hill raid inside job?". Irish Independent. Dublin. 7 February 1972. p. 5.
  21. ^ a b c "The power station inside a mountain". Irish Independent. Dublin. 14 September 1977. p. 16.
  22. ^ Fallon, Tom (30 July 1979). "In search of another Turlough Hill". The Irish Press. Dublin. p. 7.
  23. ^ Department of Communications, Energy and Natural Resources 2010, p. 78.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 30 November 2017. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  25. ^ quoted directly from Apple Computer’s Oxford Dictionary of English 3rd edition, 2010. See also Whittow, John (1984) The Penguin Dictionary of Physical Geography, p.556.

External links edit

  • Touring the empty reservoir in 1973
  • Brochure
  • Over The Hill - The Story of Turlough Hill (ESB video) on YouTube

turlough, hill, power, station, pumped, storage, power, station, ireland, owned, operated, electricity, supply, board, turlough, hill, pumped, storage, schemelough, nahanagan, lower, reservoirlocation, turlough, hill, pumped, storage, scheme, irelandcoordinate. The Turlough Hill Power Station is a pumped storage power station in Ireland owned and operated by the Electricity Supply Board ESB 1 Turlough Hill Pumped Storage SchemeLough Nahanagan the lower reservoirLocation of Turlough Hill Pumped Storage Scheme in IrelandCoordinates53 01 43 N 6 24 23 W 53 02861 N 6 40639 W 53 02861 6 40639PurposePowerStatusOperationalConstruction began1968 55 years ago 1968 Opening date1974 49 years ago 1974 Construction costIEP 22 millionOwner s ESB GroupUpper reservoirCreatesTurlough HillTotal capacity2 300 000 cubic metres 81 000 000 cu ft Surface area160 000 square metres 1 700 000 sq ft Maximum water depth19 4 metres 64 ft Lower reservoirCreatesLough NahanaganPower StationTypePumped storageHydraulic head286 metres 937 5 ft Pump generators4 x 73 MW 98 000 hp Installed capacity292 MW 392 000 hp Overall efficiency75 Storage capacity6 hoursWebsitewww wbr esb wbr ie wbr our businesses wbr generation energy trading new wbr generation asset map wbr turlough hillLike all pumped storage hydroelectric schemes it makes use of two water reservoirs connected by a pressure tunnel in this case an artificial reservoir near the summit of the mountain and the naturally occurring corrie lake Lough Nahanagan at the foot of the mountain 2 Water is pumped up from the lower reservoir to the upper reservoir using surplus power available at times of low demand and then allowed to fall by gravity from the upper reservoir back into the lower reservoir passing through turbines along the way to generate electricity 3 The generating plant resides inside the mountain in a cavern measuring 250 70 90 feet 76 21 27 metres 2 which houses four reversible pump turbines with a combined capacity of 292 megawatts 4 The upper reservoir is 19 4 metres 64 feet deep has a capacity of 2 3 million cubic metres 81 million cubic feet and covers an area of 160 000 square metres 40 acres 4 5 The power station is designed to generate electricity at times of peak demand and is instantly dispatchable it can go from standstill to full generation within 70 seconds compared with 12 hours for some thermal plants 6 It can generate electricity at full load for up to six hours per day and has a round trip energy efficiency of 75 Since 2004 Turlough Hill has been the Hydro Control Centre HCC for the entire ESB hydroelectric portfolio which comprises 19 generators in total 1 An overhaul of the plant was planned for 2011 following the failure of Unit 1 s stator bars 7 A subsequent investigation led to serious defects being discovered which led to the refurbishment of all four generating units 8 Contents 1 History 2 Name 3 See also 4 Notes 5 External linksHistory editTurlough Hill was first conceived by Dermot O Riordan Deputy Chief Engineer in the ESB s Civil Engineering Department 9 In 1964 ESB engineers visited several locations in the Wicklow Mountains digging trial pits and boreholes looking for suitable sites for a pumped storage station 10 A shortlist of three proposals was drawn up by O Riordan an artificial upper reservoir at the summit of Tonduff mountain with an artificial lower reservoir in the Glencree valley an upper reservoir using Lough Ouler a natural corrie lake near the summit of Tonelagee mountain with an artificial lower reservoir in the Glenmacnass valley and an artificial upper reservoir at Turlough Hill with Lough Nahanagan as lower reservoir 11 The Turlough Hill site was chosen as the best of these options and work commenced on the scheme in 1968 The cost was estimated at IEP 12 million 12 A loan of 6 million was secured from the World Bank to partially finance the project 13 Contracts worth 2 million were signed with Karlstad Mekaniska Werkstad for four reversible pump turbines and with Siemens for four 73 megawatt generators in 1969 14 The contracts for the civil engineering works were awarded to two German consortia Beuscher Teerbau for the upper reservoir and Alfred Kunz amp Co for the underground works in the lower reservoir 15 Concerns about the impact of the scheme on the scenery at the Wicklow Gap led to ESB whose chairman and chief executive at the time Tom Murray was an enthusiastic supporter of the project engaging the services of landscape architect Sylvia Crowe 12 She recommended that the upper reservoir be camouflaged by planting vegetation on its embankments and that the works on the lower reservoir at Lough Nahanagan be designed to fit into the background of rock 12 The siting of the transmission lines that would connect Turlough Hill to the electrical grid was a matter of some controversy Objections to the lines planned to run from Turlough Hill to the village of Hollywood came from several quarters including Bord Failte the Irish tourist board 16 In the end it was decided that they would run underground from Turlough Hill for c 1 mile 1 6 kilometres to preserve the view at the Wicklow Gap before emerging overground on pylons along the King s River to Hollywood 5 This added 600 000 to the cost of the project 17 At their peak the construction works employed over 500 personnel many of the workers lived in a temporary camp adjacent to the site which provided food and lodgings 18 During the initial exploratory works a geological fault was discovered inside the mountain and the location of the cavern housing the generating plant had to be altered 19 1 400 pounds 640 kilograms of gelignite were stolen from the site in an armed raid in 1972 20 Archaeological investigations near the Wicklow Gap during construction uncovered part of Saint Kevin s Road the ancient path that brought pilgrims from Hollywood to the monastery at Glendalough 21 The first generator went on line in December 1973 and remaining three soon followed 21 The scheme became fully operational in 1974 1 At the time of completion it was the largest civil engineering project ever carried out in Ireland 4 The final cost of the project was IEP 22 million 21 Following the completion of Turlough Hill the ESB considered a number of sites in the Wicklow and Comeragh mountains as well as around Lough Derg for further pumped storage schemes 22 However Turlough Hill remains the only such scheme in Ireland to date although the Commission for Energy Regulation has approved the construction of a 70MW facility at Knocknagreenan County Cork 23 Name editThe hill originally did not have a name on the Ordnance Survey map The engineer who identified the site J O Riordan decided to name the hill after his son Turlough 24 The name is quite fitting in any case as the pumped storage station draws water from the mountain top lake which thus becomes a dry lake There is a geological feature known as a Turlough it is defined as in Ireland a low lying area on limestone which becomes flooded in wet weather through the welling up of groundwater from the rock ORIGIN late 17th cent from Irish turloch from tur dry loch lake 25 See also edit nbsp Ireland portal nbsp Water portal nbsp Renewable energy portal Electricity sector in Ireland Spirit of Ireland A conceptual pumped storage project that may be necessary to facilitate further reliance on wind energy in IrelandNotes edit a b c Power Stations Turlough Hill ESB Group Archived from the original on 14 June 2011 Retrieved 22 July 2011 a b Power Con 19 January 1971 Turlough Hill Co Wicklow Working for the Future The Irish Times Dublin p 16 ESB project at Turlough Hill Irish Independent Dublin 22 September 1969 p 7 a b c Turlough Hill a great success The Irish Press Dublin 3 June 1975 p 6 a b Fleming Lionel 25 May 1972 Turlough Hill The Irish Times Dublin p 12 Something in reserve The Irish Times Dublin 13 September 1977 p A4 ESB Group 2011 ESB Annual Report 2010 PDF p 37 Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 23 July 2011 Turlough Hill Refurbishment Enters Final Stages ESB Energy International Retrieved 13 May 2013 Sunday Salute Sunday Independent Dublin 5 August 1973 p 9 Power storage tests in mountains The Irish Times Dublin 29 August 1964 p 15 Munro Hugh 4 November 1968 The development of electricity in Ireland The Irish Times Dublin p 18 a b c Kelly Tony 15 February 1969 12m ESB scheme begun in Wicklow The Irish Times Dublin p 9 6m loan for ESB project The Irish Times Dublin 20 March 1969 p 1 2m jobs for power plant The Irish Press Dublin 21 June 1969 p 3 Germans share ESB contract Irish Independent Dublin 26 June 1969 p 1 Fleming Lionel 19 May 1970 ESB power lines in Co Wicklow Bord Failte objections The Irish Times Dublin p 11 Scenery goes on ESB bill The Irish Press Dublin 6 October 1971 p 1 It s a happy site to work on Irish Independent Dublin 19 May 1970 p 13 The power station inside the mountain Irish Independent Dublin 19 May 1970 p 13 Turlough Hill raid inside job Irish Independent Dublin 7 February 1972 p 5 a b c The power station inside a mountain Irish Independent Dublin 14 September 1977 p 16 Fallon Tom 30 July 1979 In search of another Turlough Hill The Irish Press Dublin p 7 Department of Communications Energy and Natural Resources 2010 p 78 sfn error no target CITEREFDepartment of Communications Energy and Natural Resources2010 help Turlough Hill Poer Station Archived from the original on 30 November 2017 Retrieved 30 March 2021 quoted directly from Apple Computer s Oxford Dictionary of English 3rd edition 2010 See also Whittow John 1984 The Penguin Dictionary of Physical Geography p 556 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Turlough Hill Pumped Storage Power Station Touring the empty reservoir in 1973 Brochure Over The Hill The Story of Turlough Hill ESB video on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Turlough Hill Power Station amp oldid 1186516147, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.