Anonymous ID: 9571d5 May 21, 2019, 7:44 a.m. No.6550263   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0285 >>0294 >>0388 >>0446

>>6550225

A Reservoir Rising: How DWR is Managing Lake Oroville in an Above-Average Water Year

Published: May 16, 2019

 

https://water.ca.gov/News/Blog/2019/May-2019/How-DWR-is-Managing-Lake-Oroville-in-an-Above-Average-Water-Year

 

RESERVOIR AND WATER CONDITIONS for May 13, 2019

https://mavensnotebook.com/2019/05/13/reservoir-and-water-conditions-for-may-13-2019/

Nice short video available with graphics of reservoir levels

 

http://cdec.water.ca.gov/resapp/RescondMain

Real Time levels of reservoirs compared to historical averages and capacity.

 

!UW.yye1fxo

14 Feb 2018 - 10:08:41 PM

Watch the water.

Q

 

Oroville Dam water level is 1 foot from spillway as of May 20, 2019

 

900 ft = Current water level

901 ft (275 m) (spillway crest)

http://cdec.water.ca.gov/dynamicapp/getAll?sens_num=15

 

Oroville Dam is an earthfill embankment dam on the Feather River east of the city of Oroville, California, in the Sierra Nevada foothills east of the Sacramento Valley. At 770 feet (235 m) high, it is the tallest dam in the U.S.[8] and serves mainly for water supply, hydroelectricity generation and flood control. The dam impounds Lake Oroville, the second largest man-made lake in the state of California, capable of storing more than 3.5 million acre feet (1.1 trillion US gallons; 4.3 trillion litres).

 

Coordinates

39°32′20″N 121°29′08″W

Construction began 1961

Opening date May 4, 1968

Owner(s) California Department of Water Resource

 

Built by the California Department of Water Resources (DWR), Oroville Dam is one of the key features of the California State Water Project (SWP), one of two major projects passed that set up California's statewide water system. Construction was initiated in 1961, and despite numerous difficulties encountered during its construction, including multiple floods and a major train wreck on the rail line used to transport materials to the dam site, the embankment was topped out in 1967 and the entire project was ready for use in 1968. The dam began to generate electricity shortly afterwards with completion of the Edward Hyatt Pump-Generating Plant, then the country's largest underground power station.

 

Since its completion in 1968, the Oroville Dam has allocated the flow of the Feather River from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta into the State Water Project's California Aqueduct, which provides a major supply of water for irrigation in the San Joaquin Valley as well as municipal and industrial water supplies to coastal Southern California, and has prevented large amounts of flood damage to the area—more than $1.3 billion between the years of 1987 and 1999. The dam has confined fish migration up the Feather River and the controlled flow of the river as a result of the Oroville Dam has affected riparian habitat. Multiple attempts at trying to counter the dam's impacts on fish migration have included the construction of a salmon/steelhead fish incubator on the river, which began shortly after the dam was completed.

 

In February 2017, the main and emergency spillways threatened to fail, leading to the evacuation of 188,000 people living near the dam. After deterioration of the main spillway largely stabilized and the water level of the dam's reservoir dropped below the top of the emergency spillway, the evacuation order was lifted.