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Savannah River Hydropower Surge drives record electricity as heavy rainfall boosts flows, turbine output, and releases; Army Corps operations and SEPA marketing cut drought-era market purchases, stabilizing rates for cooperatives and municipal utilities.
The Core Facts
A rain-driven flow increase that boosts Thurmond Dam's power output, cutting purchases and costs for SEPA utilities.
- Heavy winter rains lift releases above 16,000 cfs average
- Power output 249,188 MWh vs. 44,089 MWh year-earlier
- Corps holds releases under 25,000 cfs to limit flooding
After years of intermittent drought, 2010 is shaping up as a banner year for hydropower generation at Thurmond Dam.
"In terms of flow, we're running five times as much, roughly, over this time last year," said Water Control Manager Stan Simpson, of the Army Corps of Engineers' Savannah District.
Heavy winter rains and cold temperatures that slow evaporation have kept plenty of flow in the river since December — and, as rising hydro output illustrates, more water means more electricity.
So far this year, even with several turbines shut down briefly for maintenance, Thurmond has generated 249,188 megawatts — compared with 44,089 megawatts during the same period of 2009. Average releases into the Savannah River during the first months of 2009 were barely over 3,000 cubic feet per second. This year, releases have averaged more than 16,000 cubic feet per second and have peaked at much higher levels, Simpson said.
"We've been trying to keep releases in the 25,000 range or less," he said. "If we go higher than that, we start flooding some areas."
Electricity from Thurmond and 21 other corps dams is marketed by the Southeastern Power Administration, an arm of the U.S. Energy Department, even as S.C. nuclear proposals would draw river water for cooling today.
Although more water, and more electricity, won't affect the contracted rates charged to the 491 electric cooperatives and municipalities who buy the power, it could save customers money in other ways, said Douglas Spencer, an engineer at SEPA's Elberton, Ga., headquarters, noting that utility building plans often proceed despite lower demand today.
"When we're in a drought, as drought insurance by some utilities shows, and there isn't enough water to make enough electricity, we purchase market energy at a higher cost," he said, and those higher costs are passed along to the customers.
In 2009, for example, the agency spent $17 million purchasing alternate power because of low water conditions, similar to Catawba River strains seen under heavy demand elsewhere. If adequate rainfall and water flow persist throughout 2010, such costs might be reduced or avoided.
"It depends on the weather, and of course we don't do weather predictions," he said. "What the experts are telling us is to expect an average year. We know we've had some record wet months, but they're not ready yet to say the whole year will be wet."
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