Okutadami Dam


The Okutadami Dam is a concrete gravity dam on the Tadami River, east of Uonuma on the border of Niigata and Fukushima Prefectures, Japan. The primary purpose of the dam is hydroelectric power generation and it supports a 560 MW power station which is the largest conventional hydroelectric power station in Japan. The dam also forms the second largest reservoir in Japan, next to that of the Tokuyama Dam.

Background

Construction on the dam began and its original 390 MW power station was commissioned 2 December 1960. The rest of the project was complete in 1961. Between 1999 and 2003, the power station was expanded, adding 200 MW in installed capacity. In addition, a 2.7 MW generator was added to ensure a flow of downstream for environmental purposes. Along with the same power plant upgrade, a second Kaplan turbine-generator was added to the tall Otori Dam's power station downstream at. This generator has an 87 MW capacity in addition to the existing 95 MW unit, for an installed capacity of 182 MW.

Design

The Okutadami Dam is a tall and long concrete gravity dam with a structural volume of. Sitting at the head of a catchment area, the dam creates a reservoir with a capacity of which is active storage. The reservoir has a surface area of. The power station is underground and located on the right bank of the river next to the dam's abutment. It consists of two caverns, one for the original power station and another adjacent for the expansion. After being received by the dam's intake, water supplied to the original power plant travels down three penstocks in length before reaching an individual 120 MW Francis turbine-generator. The 200 MW Francis turbine-generator receives water via a long penstock. After water is processed through the generators, it travels down two tailrace tunnels before being discharged over downstream at the upstream edge of the Otori Reservoir.