Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumBy 2020, 70% Of All American Dams Will Be At Leat 50 Years Old; Of 2 Million 4,000 Known Deficient
After years of underwhelming winter storms, 2017s abundant rain has been a mostly welcome sight for Californias water-starved communities. However, the respite from years of drought has exposed a vulnerability shared by much of the United States: the poor state of its dams and water infrastructure. On February 7, a pothole approximately 250 feet long and 30 feet deep appeared in the main spillway of Oroville Dam in Northern California. The dam is the tallest in the U.S. and contains the second-largest reservoir in California, but it is just one of tens of thousands of dams across the country that are nearing the end of their designated lifespan.
By 2020, 70 percent of the total dams in the United States will be over 50 years old, noted the American Society of Civil Engineers in their report card on the nations infrastructure. Fifty years ago dams were built with the best engineering and construction standards of the time. However, as the scientific and engineering data have improved, many dams are not expected to safely withstand current predictions regarding large floods and earthquakes.
The pothole threatened to erode the spillway structure at the dam, making it risky to release water from Lake Oroville during the intense recent storms. Without the spillway, engineers could not release enough water to keep up with the rain.
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While the outcome remains uncertain, the crisis in Oroville has already provided evidence that the way the country plans for and maintains its dam infrastructure is due for reform. The day after the mandatory evacuation, the San Jose Mercury News reported that three environmental groups had petitioned the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to require paving the emergency spillway as part of the dams re-licensing approval in 2006. They warned that the structures earthen drainage surface would not withstand a spillover, potentially compromising the structure. This type of deficiency in the nations dams may be more common than the public believes. There are an estimated 2 million dams in the United States, many of which are obsolete and no longer serve their intended purpose. Nearly 4,000 of them are considered deficient and by 2020, more than 65 percent will be past their designated lifespan. Only around 6,000 dams are owned or regulated by the federal government, which means updating these structures and protecting the public is hard to coordinate.
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https://thinkprogress.org/oroville-aging-dams-across-the-country-94386c1982ce#.q4rytspy3
JenniferJuniper
(4,515 posts)to make this "By 2020, 70% Of All American Dames Will Be At Leat 50 Years Old; Of 2 Million 4,000 Known Deficient.
Split second of outrage now has passed.