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Carrigadrohid hydroelectric power station

Carrigadrohid Dam
Carrigadrohid hydroelectric power station.JPG
Carrigadrohid hydroelectric power station is located in Ireland
Carrigadrohid hydroelectric power station
Location of Carrigadrohid Dam in Ireland
Coordinates 51°53′50″N 8°51′50″W / 51.897175°N 8.86382°W / 51.897175; -8.86382Coordinates: 51°53′50″N 8°51′50″W / 51.897175°N 8.86382°W / 51.897175; -8.86382
Status Operational
Construction began 1952
Opening date 1957
Dam and spillways
Type of dam Gravity
Height 22 m (72 ft)
Length 107 m (351 ft)
Reservoir
Catchment area 616 km2 (238 sq mi)
Surface area 9 km2 (3.5 sq mi)
Power Station
Commission date 1957
Turbines 1 x 8 MW Kaplan-type
Installed capacity 8 MW

Carrigadrohid hydroelectric power station is a hydroelectric plant located on the River Lee in County Cork, Ireland. It is owned and operated by the ESB Group.

The Carrigadrohid hydroelectric plant, along with its sister plant constructed 20 kilometres (12 miles) downstream on the River Lee at Inniscarra, formed the fourth major hydroelectric development undertaken by ESB. Construction of the reinforced concrete gravity dam started in 1952 and was complete in 1957. The dam is 107 m (351 ft) long and consists of nine blocks, each between 9.1 and 18.6 metres (30 and 61 feet) in length, and is fitted with three ground sluices and a spillway weir.

The plant consists of a single Kaplan turbine rated at 8 MW (11,000 hp) manufactured by Voith. It spins at 167 r.p.m. and feeds a 11,500kVA Siemens generator running at 10.5kV. The average output for the station is 77 GWh a year.

According to Cawley et al, the construction of this dam and the one at Inniscarra "have reduced significantly the extent and frequency of flooding along the Lee valley into Cork City". Prior to the construction, there were a number of fatal floodings in the city of Cork, including one on 2 November 1853 that killed 12 people.

As part of the construction of the reservoir to power the plant, 60% of the Gearagh, an ancient alluvial forest, was flooded. The stocks of animals like trout, otters, eels and freshwater pearl mussels were also negatively impacted by the construction. Many species, including freshwater pearl mussels, Atlantic salmon, whooper swans, kingfishers and otters can be seen in the area and the reservoir is designated an EU Special Area of Conservation.


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