Tag: dam

Alaska Hydropower Dam Helps Sustain Salmon Habitat
Fishermen's News Online, News

Alaska Hydropower Dam Helps Sustain Salmon Habitat

A hydropower dam now providing the bulk of electric power for a fisheries community on Alaska's Prince William Sound also serves to sustain spawning habitat for the fish that have made Cordova famous with seafood aficionados. The Power Creek hydroelectric plant, seven miles east of Cordova, with installed generating capacity of 6.0 megawatts, provides about 60 % of the power for Cordova from the Cordova Electric Cooperative. Humpback Creek hydropower plant, located seven miles north of Cordova with a generating capacity of 1.25 megawatts, provides about 10-15 %. A diesel generation facility just outside of the city provides the remaining percentage. The Power Creek dam is unique in that it is made of a giant inflatable rubber barrier that can be lowered to let the river return...
CDFW: Coho Salmon Returning to Klamath River Basin For 1st Time in Over 60 Years
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CDFW: Coho Salmon Returning to Klamath River Basin For 1st Time in Over 60 Years

Coho salmon, a threatened species, are slowly returning to the Klamath River Basin, now that the dam blocking their passage is gone. California Department of Fish and Wildlife officials on Nov. 22 reported the first returns of cohos to the upper Klamath River Basin in over 60 years, following removal of the former Iron Gate Dam, which was completed last month. CDFW officials said that not since construction of Iron Gate in the early 1960s have they documented coho salmon in their historic habitat in the upper watershed. The dam was one of four hydroelectric dams built on the Klamath River between 1908 and 1962 to generate electricity. The state agency report said that on Nov. 13, seven coho salmon entered the CDFW’s new Fall Creek Fish Hatchery in Siskiyou County. The creek wa...
Iron Gate Dam Reservoirs Lowered on Klamath River
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Iron Gate Dam Reservoirs Lowered on Klamath River

The largest dam removal in U.S. history is underway, with the lowering of dammed reservoirs on the Klamath River in Oregon. Members of the Yurok Tribe were on hand to witness the first big surge of waters on Jan. 11, as Oregon Public Radio reported on opening of a 16-foot-wide bypass tunnel at the base of the dam, releasing the flow of water darkened by pent-up sediment that also surged through. The Iron Gate itself is an earth embankment dam. The lowering of Iron Gate and two other reservoirs on the Klamath river will make way for removal of three remaining hydroelectric dams that are part of the Lower Klamath project in Northern California and southern Oregon. The report from Oregon Public Radio on NPR’s “All Things Considered” program hailed the removal of major dams along ...