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Guri Dam

Guri Dam

FieldValue
nameSimón Bolívar Hydroelectric Plant
Guri Dam
name_officialCentral Hidroeléctrica Simón Bolívar
locationNecuima Canyon, Bolívar
statusIn use
construction_began1963
opening1978
ownerCVG Electrificación del Caroní, C.A.
dam_typeGravity/embankment
dam_crossesCaroni River
dam_length7426 m
dam_volumeConcrete: 6026000 m3
Earth: 23801000 m3
spillway_typeService, controlled crest overflow
spillway_capacity27000 m3/s
res_nameGuri Reservoir
res_capacity_total135000000000 m3
res_surface4250 km2
plant_turbinesFrancis Turbines.
10 × 725 MW<br/>4 × 180 MW<br/>3 × 400 MW<br/>3 × 225 MW<br/>1 × 340 MW<ref>{{cite webtitleGuri Hydropower Stationurl=http://www.vhpc.com.ve/html/eng/p_records/pr_Hydropower_Guri_Hydropower_Station.htmpublisher=VHPCaccess-date=25 March 2013archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131111183700/http://www.vhpc.com.ve/html/eng/p_records/pr_Hydropower_Guri_Hydropower_Station.htmarchive-date=11 November 2013url-status=live}}
plant_capacity10,235 MW
plant_annual_gen47,000 GWh
imageGuri_Dam_in_Venezuela.JPG
dam_height162 m
location_mapVenezuela
mapframeyes
mapframe-zoom12

Guri Dam Earth: 23801000 m3 10 × 725 MW 4 × 180 MW 3 × 400 MW 3 × 225 MW 1 × 340 MW | mapframe-zoom = 12 The Simón Bolívar Hydroelectric Plant, also Guri Dam ( or Represa de Guri), previously known as the Raúl Leoni Hydroelectric Plant, is a concrete gravity and embankment dam in Bolívar State, Venezuela, on the Caroni River, built from 1963 to 1969. It is 7,426 metres long and 162 m high. It impounds the large Guri Reservoir (Embalse de Guri) with a surface area of 4250 sqkm.

The Guri Reservoir that supplies the dam is one of the largest on earth. The hydroelectric power station was once the largest worldwide in terms of installed capacity, replacing Grand Coulee HPP, but was surpassed by Brazil and Paraguay's Itaipu.

History and design

The dam and reservoir as seen from space.

Technical and economic feasibility studies were begun in 1961, conducted by the Harza Engineering Company. An international consortium of six firms was awarded the contract for the construction of the plant, including four United States companies participating under the Alliance for Progress. In 1963, construction began for the hydroelectric power station Guri in the Necuima Canyon, about 100 kilometers upstream from the mouth of the Caroní River in the Orinoco. By 1969, a 106 m and 690 m dam with the official name of Central Hidroeléctrica Simón Bolívar (previously named Central Hidroeléctrica Raúl Leoni from 1978 to 2000) had been built. It created a reservoir which is the largest fresh water body of water in Venezuela and one of the largest man-made blackwater lakes ever created, with its water level at 215 metres above sea level. The power station had a combined installed capacity of 1750 megawatts (MW).

Because the electricity demand grew so fast, 1976 saw the beginning of a second building stage: a 1300 m gravity dam was built, another spillway channel and a second powerhouse containing 10 turbines of 725 MW each. This increased the dam's dimensions to 162 m in height and to 7426 m (according to other sources 11,409 m) and the reservoir grew in size and volume to a capacity of 138 billion cubic m for flood storage or floodwater evacuation. The structure was inaugurated on 8 November 1986.

Since 2000, there is an ongoing refurbishment project to extend the operation of Guri Power Plant by 30 years. This project is to create 5 new runners and main components on Powerhouse II, and close to the end of 2007 is starting the rehabilitation of four units on Powerhouse I.

Generating failures and blackouts

2010

Due to government policy in effect from the 1960s to minimize power production from fossil fuels in order to export as much oil as possible, 74% of Venezuela's electricity comes from renewable energy like hydroelectric power. the Guri Dam alone supplied more than a third of Venezuela's electricity Part of the power generated at Guri is exported to Colombia and Brazil. The risks of this strategy became apparent in 2010, when, due to a prolonged drought, water levels were too low to produce enough electricity to meet demand. In January 2010, the Venezuelan government imposed rolling blackouts to combat low water levels behind the dam due to drought.

2016

In April 2016, water levels again became low, and the government announced blackouts of 4 hours per day, for 40 days or until water levels stabilized. Government employees were told not to come to work on Fridays, president Maduro urged women not to use hair dryers, and the electricity supplied to fifteen shopping malls was rationed. Three days were added to the 2016 Easter national holiday, allowing for a one-week shutdown of public services and private businesses.

2019

Main article: 2019 Venezuelan blackouts

On 7 March 2019, shortly before 17:00 local time, the Simón Bolívar Hydroelectric Plant failed, leaving most of Venezuela's 32 million citizens in darkness. In the days following the onset of the blackout, at least four attempts were made to restart the key San Gerónimo B substation, which distributes 80% of the country's electricity, but all failed, and no date was set for the plant's reactivation. Government officials claim the blackout was "an act of sabotage", while experts attributed the failure to aging infrastructure and insufficient maintenance.

References

References

  1. "Guri Hydropower Station". VHPC.
  2. "Hydroelectric Plants in Venezuela". IndustCards.
  3. (2011). "Guri Dam". Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc..
  4. "Dams - Guri". Covenpre VENCOLD.
  5. Farrell, John. (23 February 1969). "A Dam And Falls in Venezuela Jungle". The Blade.
  6. (1977). "World Environment Report". Center for International Environment Information..
  7. (1992). "NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC".
  8. "The Guri Hydroelectric Power Plant Project, Venezuela".
  9. (17 February 1964). "International Commerce, Volume 70". United States Bureau of International Commerce.
  10. (1992). "Mitteilungen aus dem Geologisch-Paläontologischen Institut der Universität Hamburg". Geol.-Paläont. Inst, Univ. Hamburg..
  11. (2007). "Waterfalls". Infobase Publishing.
  12. Encyclopaedia Britannica, inc. (1993). "The New Encyclopædia Britannica: Micropædia". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  13. (1994). "Archiv Für Hydrobiologie". E. Schweizerbart'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung (Nägele u. Obermiller).
  14. (1981). "Latin America Report". [Executive Office of the President], Federal Broadcast Information Service, Joint Publications Research Service.
  15. (1986). "Carib-Latin Energy Consultant". Carib-Latin Energy Consultants Limited.
  16. (15 April 2004). "Hydraulics of Dams and River Structures: Proceedings of the International Conference, Tehran, Iran, 26-28 April 2004". CRC Press.
  17. (2003). "International Journal on Hydropower & Dams". Aqua-Media International.
  18. (1988). "Keesing's Record of World Events". Longman.
  19. (1 February 2011). "Dragon in the Tropics: Hugo Chavez and the Political Economy of Revolution in Venezuela". Brookings Institution Press.
  20. (2010). "Venezuela". ABC-CLIO.
  21. (22 April 2016). "Venezuela Announces Daily 4-Hour Power Cuts Amid Drought". [[National Public Radio]].
  22. (15 April 2016). "Venezuela to ration malls, change clocks, to save power". Reuters.
  23. Millward, David. (10 April 2016). "Venezuelan women urged to stop using hairdryers". The Telegraph.
  24. (9 April 2016). "President of Venezuela tells women to stop using hairdryers".
  25. "Huge power outage leaves most of Venezuela in darkness".
  26. (2019-03-11). "No End in Sight to Venezuela's Blackout, Experts Warn".
  27. "Venezuela power flickers after worst blackout in decades".
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