- Ecological threats loom amid rising Calif. reservoir, damaged spillway at tallest US dam
- The higher flows of water have further eroded the gated spillway channel
- The worst case would be if the emergency spillway (which was built in the 1960s and has never been used) starts to erode - potentially leading to the formation of a deeper channel allowing for a rapid uncontrolled outflow from the dam.
The Oroville Dam California’s
second-largest reservoir has for the first time since it was completed in 1968,
begun spewing water from its storm-swollen reservoir overtopping the emergency
spillway Saturday, sending sheets of water down a forested hillside and adding
to the murk and debris churning in the Feather River below. The emergency
releases underscored the perilous situation confronting the operators of
California’s second-largest reservoir for the rest of this extraordinarily
rainy winter.
Photo RT.com
Unable to release enough water from the dam’s 3,000-foot main spillway, which split open Tuesday and continues to erode, the California Department of Water Resources announced that storm waters reached the top of the dam at around 8 a.m. Saturday and began flowing over the concrete lip of the adjacent emergency spillway onto a wooded ravine below reports the Sacramento Bee.
Unable to release enough water from the dam’s 3,000-foot main spillway, which split open Tuesday and continues to erode, the California Department of Water Resources announced that storm waters reached the top of the dam at around 8 a.m. Saturday and began flowing over the concrete lip of the adjacent emergency spillway onto a wooded ravine below reports the Sacramento Bee.
The flow began as a steady, smooth spill
across the 1,700-foot-wide lip of the emergency structure, and was expected to
peak at 6,000 to 12,000 cubic feet of water per second at around midnight
Saturday. With dry weather in the near-term forecast for the Sierra and inflows
to the reservoir slowing, the lake level should fall below the emergency
spillway as of Monday night, said Doug Carlson, a DWR spokesman.
Photo Metabunk
Photo Metabunk
But the crisis at Lake Oroville won’t abate
any time soon. Northern California is on pace for its wettest winter ever, and
Croyle said an estimated 2.8 million acre-feet of snow blankets the Sierra
above the dam. Depending on how quickly that melts, it will put additional
strain on Oroville Dam in the months to come.
“Our next 60 to 90 days will be critical,
how we route this (snow) runoff through this reservoir,” Croyle said. “There’s
a lot of snow up there.”
At various vista points in Oroville, a
community of 15,000 just downstream of the dam, residents gathered under clear
skies to gape in awe at the Feather River, so infused with mud and debris it
resembled liquid clay as it tore through its channel.
Longtime resident Tom Oxford, 55, took in
the view from a residential ridge on Mira Loma Drive, where the river surged
beneath a railroad trestle. He took note that the trestle and levees on both
sides were holding, with heavy moss rock that had been there for decades
undisturbed by the fast-moving water.
Still, the sight was piercing. “We’ve never
seen the river that brown before,” Oxford said, “and I’ve been here 50 years.”
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