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Hòa Bình Dam

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hòa Bình Dam
Official nameThuỷ điện Hoà Bình
CountryVietnam
LocationHòa Bình
Coordinates20°48′30″N 105°19′26″E / 20.80833°N 105.32389°E / 20.80833; 105.32389
StatusOperational
Construction beganNovember 1979
Opening date1994
Construction cost1.5 billion (1996)
Owner(s)Vietnam Electricity
Operator(s)Hoa Binh Hydro Power Company
Dam and spillways
Type of damEmbankment dam
ImpoundsBlack River
Height128 m (420 ft)
Length970 m (3,182 ft)
Reservoir
CreatesSông Đà Reservoir
Total capacity1,600,000,000 m3 (5.7×1010 cu ft)
Surface area208 km2 (80 sq mi)
Power Station
TypeConventional
Turbines8 × 240 MW
Installed capacity1,920 MW
Annual generation8,160 GWh

The Hòa Bình Dam on the Black River (Vietnamese: Sông Đà) is the largest hydroelectric dam in Vietnam from 1994 to 2012 (this record was broken by Sơn La Dam), and one of the largest in Southeast Asia, with a generating capacity of 1,920 MW.[1][2] The Sông Đà Reservoir, with a capacity of 9 billion m3 was formed as the river was dammed.[3]

The dam is located in Hòa Bình City of the Hòa Bình Province in the north of Vietnam. It measures 128 m (420 ft) in height, and 970 m (3,182 ft) in length. It is owned by Vietnam Electricity and operated by the Hoa Binh Hydro Power Company.[4]

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Transcription

Construction

In 1961, the North Vietnam government established a committee on exploring hydropower sites. This was followed by construction of the Thác Bà Dam, starting in 1963. After the Vietnamese reunification, damming the Black River was explored.[5]

Financed and built with Soviet Union and Russian money and experts, construction on the rockfill dam began on November 6, 1979 and was completed in December 1994.[1][6] The responsible engineer on site of the project was Russian Pavel Bagachenko.[7] In 1986, the river was fully dammed.[8] The first generator unit went operational in 1988, with the final unit starting in 1994.[2]

The Russian engineers used experience from building the Aswan Dam for the construction. The dam structure goes up to 280 m deep in the surrounding rock. 30,000 workers, 5,000 soldiers and 750 Russian engineers and 1,000 Vietnamese construction managers participated in the construction.[2][7] Many of the Vietnamese volunteered to help with the construction of the dam.[9][10] During construction there were 168 deaths, 11 Russian experts and 157 Vietnamese.[11]

The dam was built to high safety standards, due to earthquake risk in the area,[12] and the enormous impact of dam failure. 12 million people would become homeless if the dam were to fail, and parts of Hanoi could be 30 m under water.[13]

A letter from the Russian engineers to the future generation of Vietnamese people was sealed inside a concrete monument, to be opened on January 1, 2100.[2]

Power generation

Power is generated by utilizing eight turbines with a capacity of 240 MW, totaling an installed capacity of 1,920 MW.[14]

When the dam was first completed, it fulfilled between 30% and 50% of Vietnam's electricity output. As this exceeded the demand of northern Vietnam, a 1,487 km north–south high-voltage line had to be constructed.[9] By 2016 the dam accounted for 6% of Vietnam's total electricity output. Each year approximately 10 billion kWh of electricity is generated by the dam, providing around half of the government revenue of Hòa Bình Province.[8] Since the dam went operational, as of 2021 it had produced a cumulative 230 billion kWh of electricity.[2] The dam is staffed by 800 workers.

In January 2021, an expansion project commenced, adding an additional 480 MW to the generating capacity. When it is completed in 2024, the maximum electricity generation output of the dam will be 2400 MW.[15]

Impact

In addition to electricity generation, the dam helps to ensure the stability of the power grid, protects Hanoi and the Red River Delta against floods, and helps to keep the downstream river navigable.[8] Since its completion, the dam controlled dozens of major floods.[16]

11,141 households, approximately 89,720 people, were relocated[17] with 13 thousand ha of land being submerged.

On the neighboring Tượng Hill, an 18m high, 400 ton statue of Ho Chi Minh stands looking over the dam.[18] The story goes that when Ho Chi Minh crossed the Red River here in a boat during the nation's struggle for independence against America he was so frustrated with the difficulty that he proclaimed that when North and South are reunified a dam will be built to calm the mighty river.[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Hydroelectric power stations in Vietnam". Industcards.com. Archived from the original on 2009-07-19. Retrieved 2010-04-04.
  2. ^ a b c d e VnExpress. "Thủy điện Hòa Bình - Công trình kỳ vĩ của thế kỷ 20". vnexpress.net (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 2021-05-08.
  3. ^ "Song Da Reservoir". ASEAN Regional Centre for Biodiversity Conservation. Archived from the original on 6 August 2010. Retrieved 4 April 2010.
  4. ^ ETC. "Hoa Binh Hydropower Plant". ETC. Retrieved 2021-05-08.
  5. ^ "Dấu ấn 50 năm ngành xây lắp thủy điện Việt Nam". www.quangninh.gov.vn. Retrieved 2021-05-08.
  6. ^ "Mekong Utility Watch - Resettlement Performance - Hoa Binh Hydropower Project" (PDF). Probe International. 2006-08-22. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-08-20. Retrieved 2010-04-04.
  7. ^ a b "Dấu ấn Nga trên Thủy điện Hòa Bình". www.qdnd.vn (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 2021-05-08.
  8. ^ a b c "Thuy-dien-Hoa-Binh-Nguon-sang-tren-song-Da". www.nldc.evn.vn. Retrieved 2021-05-08.
  9. ^ a b "Hoang Viet Cuong. (2009). Hoa binh hydropower – the great work of 20th century. 06/10, 2014". Archived from the original on 2022-06-08. Retrieved 2021-05-08.
  10. ^ Huu, Ty Pham (2015-01-13). Dilemmas of hydropower development in Vietnam: Between dam-induced displacement and sustainable development (PDF). Eburon Uitgeverij B.V. ISBN 978-90-5972-959-9.
  11. ^ "Âm vang Thủy điện Hòa Bình". 2020-10-09.
  12. ^ Trinh, Phan; Vinh, Hoang; Huong, Nguyen; Liem, Ngo (2013-01-01). "Active fault segmentation and seismic hazard in Hoa-Binh reservoir, Vietnam". Open Geosciences. 5 (2): 223. Bibcode:2013CEJG....5..223T. doi:10.2478/s13533-012-0128-5. ISSN 2391-5447. S2CID 128571028.
  13. ^ News, VietNamNet. "Đập Thủy điện Hòa Bình chịu được 4 quả bom nguyên tử". VietNamNet (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 2021-05-08. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  14. ^ Hoa Binh Hydro Power Plant Archived April 23, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "Khởi công Nhà máy thủy điện Hòa Bình mở rộng". VOV.VN (in Vietnamese). 10 January 2021. Retrieved 2021-05-08.
  16. ^ "Thủy điện Hòa Bình đóng góp quan trọng cho sự nghiệp công nghiệp hóa- hiện đại hóa đất nước". hanoimoi.com.vn. 9 November 2018. Retrieved 2021-05-08.
  17. ^ Dan, Phuc Tiep (2011). "Hoa Binh Hydropower: Impacts on resettled and downstream communities" (PDF). Hoa Binh Union of Science and Technology Association.
  18. ^ VnExpress. "Công trình thủy điện - 'Đặc sản' du lịch của Hòa Bình". vnexpress.net (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 2021-05-08.
  19. ^ TITC. "Thủy điện Hòa Bình - điểm nhấn trong hành trình thăm quan hồ sông Đà". Tổng cục Du lịch Việt Nam (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 2021-05-08.
This page was last edited on 12 April 2024, at 07:40
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