A list of puns related to "Lake Oroville"
Water levels at historic lows
Losing 1 foot of water a day
Hydro plant will be offline for months
Rolling blackouts for California
Will drive more people out of the state
Engineered Population re-location
Mismanagement of Water Resources blamed on Climate Change
Globalist Water Wars
Meanwhile water trucks are delivering water to golf courses
If dam dries out--then is hit by torrential rains-- could cause cracking
Dam Collapse
PS -Down to 642 ft
What is the Magic shut off number I wonder--maybe 641=11
https://www.mercurynews.com/2021/08/05/lake-oroville-reaches-all-time-low-level-hydroelectric-plant-will-shut-down-for-first-time-ever/
Four years ago, Oroville Dam, the tallest in the United States, made international news when its massive 10-mile-long reservoir filled to the top in heavy winter storms, and raging waters destroyed its spillway, causing the emergency evacuation of 188,000 people.
But now, in the latest symbol of Californiaβs worsening drought, the opposite problem is underway: Lake Orovilleβs water level has fallen so low that on Thursday, for the first time since the dam was built in 1967, its power plant was shut down because there is no longer enough water to spin the turbines and generate electricity.
βThis is just one of many unprecedented impacts we are experiencing in California as a result of our climate-induced drought,β said Karla Nemeth, director of the state Department of Water Resources, which owns the dam.
On Thursday, the reservoir was only 24% full, having fallen below an all-time low record set in September 1977. The lake level has dropped a stunning 250 feet in the past two years. The water level has fallen below the intake pipes that normally send water to spin six huge turbines at the Edward Hyatt Power Plant in the bedrock under the dam.
The loss of Orovilleβs electricity wonβt by itself cause blackouts. Even when the lake is full, the Hyatt power plant, one of the largest hydroelectric plants in the state, provides about 1% of Californiaβs peak statewide electricity demand.
But the problem illustrates a wider challenge facing California this year from the drought. Reservoirs are low all over.
And hydroelectricity is the stateβs second-largest source of power, providing about 15% of Californiaβs electricity each year. During the first four months this year, hydroelectric production in California fell 37% compared with the same time last year and 71% compared with 2019, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.
That power has to be made up to reduce the risk of blackouts.
βThis is a huge problem. Itβs part of the big challenge we are facing this summer,β said Severin Borenstein, co-director of the Energy Institute at the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley.
The lost electricity can be replaced largely by increasing natural gas power plant production and importing electricity from other states, said Borenstein, who also serves on th
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