An Official Web Site of the United States Government

Tazimina hydroelectric project, Iliamna, Alaska. Final technical and construction cost report

Printer-friendly version

Research and Development

  • Link:http://www.osti.gov/bridge/advancedsearch.jsp
  • Source:http://www.osti.gov/rdprojects
  • Resource Type:Technical Report
  • OSTI Identifier:676961
  • Published Date:2009-12-10
  • Subject:13 HYDRO ENERGY; PROGRESS REPORT; SMALL-SCALE HYDROELECTRIC POWER PLANTS; ALASKA; APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY; ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
  • Description:The Iliamna-Newhalen-Nondalton Electric Cooperative (INNEC) provides electrical power to three communities of the same names. These communities are located near the north shore of Iliamna Lake in south-central Alaska approximately 175 miles southwest of Anchorage. A hydroelectric project was constructed for these communities, starting in the spring of 1996 and ending in the spring of 1998. The project site is on the Tazimina River about 12 miles northeast of Iliamna Lake. The taximina River flow ...Show More
  • Description:The Iliamna-Newhalen-Nondalton Electric Cooperative (INNEC) provides electrical power to three communities of the same names. These communities are located near the north shore of Iliamna Lake in south-central Alaska approximately 175 miles southwest of Anchorage. A hydroelectric project was constructed for these communities, starting in the spring of 1996 and ending in the spring of 1998. The project site is on the Tazimina River about 12 miles northeast of Iliamna Lake. The taximina River flows west from the Aleutian Range. The project site is at Tazimina Falls about 9 miles upstream of the confluence of the Tazimina River and the Newhalen River. The project has an installed capacity of 824 kilowatts (kW) and is expandable to 1.5 megawatts (MW). The project is run-of-the-river (no storage) and uses the approximately 100 feet of natural head provided by the falls. The project features include a channel control sill, intake structure, penstock, underground powerhouse, tailrace, surface control building, buried transmission line and communication cable, and access road. ...Show Less
MORE LIKE THIS

Explanation

Based on your search keyword(s), we found other relevant matches across various data sources.

© Copyright 2011 Small Business Administration. All rights reserved.