4 HYDRO ELECTRIC POWER STATIONS

 HYDRO ELECTRIC POWER STATIONS

Hydroelectric power plants do not use up resources to create electricity nor do they pollute the air, land, or water, as other power plants may. 

Hydroelectric power has played an important part in the development of this Nation's electric power industry. 

Both small and large hydroelectric power developments were instrumental in the early expansion of the electric power industry. 

Hydroelectric power comes from flowing water winter and spring runoff from mountain streams and clear lakes. 

Water, when it is falling by the force of gravity, can be used to turn turbines and generators that produce electricity.

Hydroelectric power is important to our Nation. 

Growing populations and modern technologies require vast amounts of electricity for creating, building, and expanding. 

In the 1920's, hydroelectric plants
supplied as much as 40 percent of the electric energy produced. 

Although the amount of energy produced by this means has steadily increased, the amount produced by other types of power plants has increased at a faster rate and hydroelectric power presently supplies about 10 percent of the electrical generating capacity of the United States.

Hydropower is an essential contributor in the national power grid because of its ability to respond quickly to rapidly varying loads or system disturbances, which base load plants with steam
systems powered by combustion or nuclear processes cannot accommodate. 

Power plants throughout the Western United States produce an average of 42 billion kWh (kilowatt-hours) per year, enough to meet the residential needs of more than 14 million people. 

This is the electrical energy equivalent of about 72 million barrels of oil.

Hydroelectric power plants are the most efficient means of producing electric energy. 

The efficiency of today's hydroelectric plant is about 90 percent. 

Hydroelectric plants do not create air
pollution, the fuel--falling water--is not consumed, projects have long lives relative to other forms of energy generation, and hydroelectric generators respond quickly to changing system conditions. 

These favorable characteristics continue to make hydroelectric projects attractive sources of electric power.

How Hydropower Works

Hydroelectric power comes from water at work, water in motion. 

It can be seen as a form of solar energy, as the sun powers the hydrologic cycle which gives the earth its water. 

In the hydrologic cycle, atmospheric water reaches the earth= s surface as precipitation. 

Some of this water evaporates, but much of it either percolates into the soil or becomes surface runoff. 

Water from rain and melting snow
eventually reaches ponds, lakes, reservoirs, or oceans where evaporation is constantly occurring.



In nature, energy cannot be created or destroyed, but its form can change. 

In generating electricity, no new energy is created. 

Actually one form of energy is converted to another form. 

To generate electricity, water must be in motion. 

This is kinetic (moving) energy. 

When flowing water turns blades in a turbine, the form is changed to mechanical (machine) energy. 

The turbine turns the generator rotor which then converts this mechanical energy into another energy form -- electricity. 

Since water is the initial source of energy, we call this hydroelectric power or hydropower for short.

At facilities called hydroelectric power plants, hydropower is generated. 

Some power plants are located on rivers, streams, and canals, but for a reliable water supply, dams are needed. 

Dams store water for later release for such purposes as irrigation, domestic and industrial use, and power generation. 

The reservoir acts much like a battery, storing water to be released as needed to generate power.

The dam creates a Ahead or height from which water flows. 

A pipe (penstock) carries the water
from the reservoir to the turbine. 

The fast-moving water pushes the turbine blades, something like a
pinwheel in the wind. 

The waters force on the turbine blades turns the rotor, the moving part of the electric generator. 

When coils of wire on the rotor sweep past the generator=s stationary coil (stator), electricity is produced.

This concept was discovered by Michael Faraday in 1831 when he found that electricity could be generated by rotating magnets within copper coils. 

When the water has completed its task, it flows on unchanged to serve other needs.

Once the electricity is produced, it must be delivered to where it is needed -- our homes, schools, offices, factories, etc. 

Dams are often in remote locations and power must be transmitted over some distance to its users. 

Vast networks of transmission lines and facilities are used to bring electricity to
us in a form we can use. 

All the electricity made at a power plant comes first through transformers which
raise the voltage so it can travel long distances through power lines. 

(Voltage is the pressure that forces an
electric current through a wire.) 

At local substations, transformers reduce the voltage so electricity can be
divided up and directed throughout an area. 

Transformers on poles (or buried underground, in some neighborhoods) further reduce the electric power to the right voltage for appliances and use in the home.

When electricity gets to our homes, we buy it by the kilowatt-hour, and a meter measures how much we used.

While hydroelectric power plants are one source of electricity, other sources include power plants that burn fossil fuels or split atoms to create steam which in turn is used to generate power. 

Gas turbine, solar, geothermal, and wind-powered systems are other sources. 

All these power plants may use the same system of transmission lines and stations in an area to bring power to you. 

By use of this power grid,‖ electricity can be interchanged among several utility systems to meet varying demands. 

So the electricity lighting your reading lamp now may be from a hydroelectric power plant, a wind generator, a nuclear facility, or a coal, gas, or oil-fired power plant or a combination of these.

The area where you live and its energy resources are prime factors in determining what kind of power you use. 

For example, in Washington State hydroelectric power plants provided approximately 80 percent of the electrical power during 2002. 

In contrast, in Ohio during the same year, almost 87 percent of the electrical power came from coal-fired power plants due to the area=s ample supply of coal. 

Electrical utilities range from large systems serving broad regional areas to small power companies serving individual communities.

Most electric utilities are investor-owned (private) power companies. 

Others are owned by towns, cities, and rural electric associations. 

Surplus power produced at facilities owned by the Federal Government is marketed to preference power customers (A customer given preference by law in the purchase of federally generated electrical energy which is generally an entity which is nonprofit and publicly financed.) 

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