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Earth Changes and the Pole Shift

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Dams at Risk: 65-Foot Crack in Washington State Dam

  • Posted by Howard on March 2, 2014 at 2:00am
  • View Blog

A large crack has been found in the Wanapum Dam on the Columbia River which supports the utility power supply to a major cluster of data centers in central Washington state.

 

65-Foot Crack Found in Washington State Dam (Feb 25)

The 2-inch-wide crack was found Thursday after divers were sent into the Columbia River because engineers detected a misalignment in a spillway on Wanapum Dam near the central Washington town of Vantage, said Tom Stredwick, a spokesman for the Grant County Public Utility District.

The Wanapum Dam generates more than 1,000 megawatts of electricity for the Grant County PUD, the utility that provides electricity to major data centers operated by Microsoft, Yahoo, Dell, Sabey Data Centers and Vantage Data Centers.

On February 25, dam officials noticed an irregular bowing of the dam near a section of a spillgate pier along the mile-long structure. Divers examined the area Thursday and discovered a two-inch wide crack running horizontally, located about 75 feet below the water’s surface. It runs the entire width of the 65-foot-wide pier.

The risk of a failure of the dam is high enough that the county has initiated an emergency plan. To relieve pressure on the dam, the water level is being lowered by 20 feet.

Source

 

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Owen Falls Dam in Uganda Falling Apart (Feb 28)
The Owen Falls dam in Jinja could cave in, if the cracks and damage to the dam are not repaired, an official of Eskom, the hydro power generation company, has said.

Huge cracks continue to develop in the walls and supporting pillars of the dam. Water continuously sips through the gaping holes, expanding the cracks and making the dam weaker by the day.

Source

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Lake Manatee Dam at Risk of Collapse (Feb 14)

The Lake Manatee Dam in Bradeton, Florida is in a "severely distressed state" because of erosion, engineering consultants have found, forcing county officials to take corrective actions.

Heavy rains over four or five days could compromise the Lake Manatee Dam, Manatee County government warned in a news release February 14.

As a precaution, workers have begun to lower the water level of the lake.

Engineers and officials are concerned that the dam's clay core may have been compromised.

Source

 

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Water Gushes over Crumbling Dam in Zimbabwe (Feb 9)

A dam on the Tokwe river in the Masvingo area of Zimbabwe is close to bursting as water from heavy rains finding its way through gaps in the uncompleted dam wall.

Construction of the Tokwe Mukorsi dam began in 1998 but stalled in 2008. The dam was due to be completed at the end of last year but the deadline has passed with construction still not finished. Pictures from the area show water gushing through breaks in the wall and a huge build up of water in the reservoir behind it. Villagers have been evacuated as quickly as possible, with around 4,000 people believed to be at risk should the dam burst.

According to the Daily News, the Zimbabwe Air Force is helping people evacuate. The Minister for Masvingo province is quoted as saying that the government is on high alert and "A helicopter from the AFZ has been airlifting some families who were marooned by the floods but we are not yet sure how many people are still marooned."

Source

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"All dams will break either during the pole shift or in the months leading up to the hour of the shift. Look at the structure of the dam! It assumes that rock holding both sides of the dam will remain in place and not move. Of course these sides will move. This is a subduction zone! There is mountain building and even where the mountains are not being pushed upward, they are moving from side to side. Some parts are more fluid than others, which are more resistant during any earthquake thrust, so there IS inevitably movement to the side. They will pull apart, slide forward or backwards, but in any case the water will find its way around the dam." 

ZetaTalk Chat Q&A: July 18, 2009

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Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on December 2, 2016 at 1:31am

http://www.dominicantoday.com/dr/local/2016/12/1/61542/Major-dam-wa...

1 December 2016, 11:06 AM

Major dam was drained to avert catastrophic collapse

Santo Domingo.- The Water Observatory revealed Wednesday that Tavera dam (central) was on the verge of collapse with the ensuing threat to lives and property if not for the decision to release water and lower its level several times.

Observatory technicians said Tavera's collapse would've placed  the lives of people at risk and would've led to large-scale losses of cattle and other damages along the Yaque del Sur river.

It said as much as 500 cubic meters per second was discharged from the dam back to the Yaque river, which caused flooding in Santiago, Valverde and Montecristi.

"If it were not for the correct application of the new protocol of draining the Tavera dam that was in imminent danger of collapsing and putting at risk the life of the people who reside in areas around the dam, as well as high scale losses to cattle," the agency said in a statement.

Tavera dam, whose operating capacity ceiling is 327 meters above sea level, was operating at its maximum capacity during several days for the first time since inaugurated in 1972, as the torrential rains drenched the Yaque and Jimenoa river basins.

and another:

http://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2016-11-30-op-ed-a-clear-and...

Op-Ed: A clear and present danger of Kariba Dam collapse

2 DECEMBER 2016 02:19 (SOUTH AFRICA)

Photo: Kariba Dam, by Joe McKenna via Flickr.

Photo: Kariba Dam, by Joe McKenna via Flickr.

Several decades on, the much heralded Kariba Dam is in big trouble, even facing possible collapse, with potentially catastrophic consequences. By CHISTOPHER GILMOUR.

Zambia and Zimbabwe currently derive the bulk of their electricity supplies from hydroelectric dams on the Zambezi and other rivers in the region. The drought has resulted in prolonged low water levels in the dams, which has resulted in sustained blackouts in Zambia for upwards of eight hours per day in recent times.

Provided the rains return, electricity supplies should normalise. But a far greater potential danger exists. The region’s largest hydroelectric dam – Kariba – has developed some extremely serious flaws during its 50-plus years of existence and some observers have even suggested that the dam is in grave danger of collapse, with the attendant catastrophic consequences. Currently at 18% full, Kariba hit a recent low point of around 12% in January 2016.

The Kariba Dam on the Zambezi, between Zambia and Zimbabwe, was designed and constructed just before and after the end of British colonial rule in Africa. Designed by Coyne et Bellier of France and constructed by Salini Impreglio of Italy in two main phases between 1956 and 1977, the dam was financed by the World Bank. This was the heyday of the Zambian Copperbelt activities near Ndola in the north of the country and sustained electrical supply was critical to ensuring the smooth operation of the copper industry. At the time, Kariba was one of the largest hydroelectric power stations in the world in terms of its power output, though today it doesn’t even come close to being in the top 20.

Serious and unexpected flooding in the Zambezi Valley during 1957 and 1958 led the designer and constructors to deviate from the original plan for the dam insofar as they decided to install six sluice gates rather than three, to accommodate hitherto unheard of water levels. This action may have inadvertently resulted in serious design flaws that only manifested themselves years later.

The scouring action of the spillways has, over time, resulted in a 90-metre deep “plunge pool” being formed in front of the dam wall. This canyon is now only about 30 metres away from the dam’s foundations and, if left unchecked, threatens to undermine those very foundations.

The erosion problem was first identified as early as 1962, after only three years of operation. At that time, the plunge pool was around 30m wide but by the 1980s it had more than doubled in size. Since the 1990s, only three of the six floodgates have been allowed to be opened at any point in time, thus limiting the scouring impact of the spillway. This action appears to have resulted in no further erosion of the plunge pool. Of course, this is a mixed blessing, as it has meant that average water levels in the dam have required to be kept lower than they otherwise would have been, resulting in lower amounts of electricity generating capacity.

A less pressing problem is that the concrete surrounding the floodgates has swelled over the years, inhibiting the ability of the dam to rid itself of excess water during times of flood. Of course, this is not a problem at all currently, due to the average dam level of the past two years only being 18%.

The World Bank has organised syndicated funding of almost $300-million to rehabilitate the dam. This would involve reshaping the floor of the plunge pool so that spillway water no longer splashes back towards the dam wall. It also involves rebuilding the six sluice gates. The estimated repair time for the reshaping of the plunge pool is three years, with the sluice repairs taking eight years. Notwithstanding the very low dam level, work can only be carried out during the dry winter season each year and cumulative delays so far have meant that reshaping contracts are only due to be awarded in November 2016 and sluice gate contract work only beginning in June 2017.

The World Bank is very confident that Kariba Dam is not in any danger of collapse, a view that is diametrically opposed by the Institute of Risk Management South Africa (IRMSA) and AON South Africa, which issued a report in 2015 written by IRMSA founder member Kay Darbourn that stated that the dam wall would collapse if urgent repair work wasn’t carried out very quickly. The report contained the extremely chilling line, “If nothing is done, the dam will collapse in three years”.

So which body is correct – the World Bank or IRMSA? Although The World Bank seems very confident that the wall won’t collapse, there have been suggestions that the body has been only too happy for scaremongering reports along the lines of IRMSA’s to circulate, as this has helped speed up the notoriously slow process of syndicating the loans required for rehabilitation.

But if IRMSA is correct, the consequences could be devastating. A collapsed Kariba Dam would wreak havoc on human and animal life as the resulting tsunami tore through the Zambezi Valley. The force of water would be so great that it would likely also destroy Cahora Bassa Dam in Mozambique, 300 miles away.

Under such a doomsday scenario, aside from the loss of animal and human life, electricity production in the southern Africa region would be seriously degraded. Around 40% of southern Africa’s electrical generating capacity (ex-SA) would be gone and the industries that depend on this power, such as mining, would be crippled.

South Africa currently relies on Cahora Bassa to deliver 1,500 megawatts of clean power a day and if that were to be switched off, rolling power cuts could resume in this country. Reconstructing both dams would take up to eight years and during that time the cumulative misery of the hundreds of thousands of displaced people would be incalculable.

Perhaps the last word on this subject should be left to the late South African prime minister John Vorster; in a completely different context, he is credited with coining the phrase “consequences too ghastly to contemplate”. If the World Bank is wrong and Kariba does indeed collapse, the consequences really would be too ghastly to contemplate. 

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on December 1, 2016 at 12:01am

http://www.glasgowdailytimes.com/news/dam-breach-affects-mammoth-ca...

Dam breach affects Mammoth Cave

November 30 2016

MAMMOTH CAVE NATIONAL PARK — Work crews with Mammoth Cave National Park were out on the Green River on Tuesday, checking the water level.

The water level of the river has fallen due to a new hole in and under the Green River Dam No. 6 near Brownsville, causing lowering water levels in the pool behind it that have backed up into the national park.

“We've had folks out on the river today looking at it,” said Vickie Carson, public information officer for Mammoth Cave National Park. “We're trying to determine what we need to do and how we need to adapt to the river being at a lower level.”

Carson explained that half of the Green River has impounded in the national park.

“It breached sometime over the weekend,” she said.

A Louisville Courier Journal article published Tuesday stated William Michael Turner, chief of environmental resources at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers's Louisville District, said this week that the dam was leaking following a weekend incident Friday night and Saturday morning powered by the river's force on the structure.

Water levels in the river's pool that had backed up into the park dropped nearly 7 feet late Friday and early Saturday, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, the newspaper article said.

The Corps of Engineers in Louisville issued a press release Tuesday afternoon asking the public to stay out of the area of the dam and off structures, and that recreational boaters and those who canoe to also 

stay clear of the area and not approach the upstream side of the dam.

The vertical lock walls are being undermined, as well as the dam concrete section and are likely to collapse in the near future, the press release said.

The lock and dam was built in 1904-1905 and put into operation in 1906, the press release said.

Officials have been concerned about the lock and dam for quite some time.

“The (National) Park Service and the U.S. Department of Interior have gone on record since 1951 that the lock and dam should be removed to improve the river conditions and conditions in the cave and conditions in the park to return the river to free-flowing conditions,” Carson said.

It is possible the falling water levels could affect the Green River Ferry, which operates within Mammoth Cave National Park, Carson said. Many people living in Edmonson County cross the Green River in the national park so as to avoid driving around the outer boundary of the national park.

The decrease in water levels could also have an effect on cave passageways.

“Right now with the ferry still being able to run that means the river levels in the cave haven't changed very much at this point, but if the river drops further at the upper end of the impoundment then yes, it will have an effect on the cave passageways,” Carson said. “These are things that we are still accessing.”

The lowering of water levels could also affect the mussel population in the river.

“There are more mussel species in the area of the river that is free flowing,” Carson said. “That is above 

the impoundment. There is more free-flowing water now that the river has breached. Free-flowing water is better for mussel species.”

At deadline time Tuesday, Carson had not yet had an opportunity to speak with crews that had been out on the river accessing the situation. She said she hoped to have more information to share on Wednesday.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on September 14, 2016 at 9:25pm

http://www.thanhniennews.com/society/hydropower-dam-tunnel-collapse...

Hydropower dam tunnel collapses in central Vietnam flash floods, many missing

By Hoang Son - Hua Xuyen Huynh, Thanh Nien News

QUANG NAM - Wednesday, September 14, 2016 09:40

Heavy machines buried after the collapse. Photo credit: Tan Vu/Tuoi TreHeavy machines buried after the collapse. Photo credit: Tan Vu/Tuoi Tre

  • Dam collapse prompts evacuation in northern Vietnam



At least two workers and 14 local residents are missing after a hydropower water tunnel collapsed in Quang Nam Province Tuesday.
Huynh Khanh Toan, vice chairman of the province People’s Committee, said flash floods triggered by Typhoon Rai caused the water tunnel at the Song Bung 2 Hydropower Plant to collapse when 18 workers were working nearby.
The two missing workers have been identified as Nguyen Minh Luan, 24, and Dang Van Tien, 36.
Rescuers are searching for all the missing people.
Zoram Huan, head of La Ee Commune in the province’s Nam Giang District, said three houses in his commune were washed away and many others were inundated.
Ten people in the commune are missing after the tunnel collapse.
A source told Thanh Nien that 12 people were working near the site and four are missing.
Lowland areas are trying to find out if more people are missing. Figures on material losses are not yet available.
In a report on the incident, Vuong Thanh Chung, deputy director of the hydropower plant management, said the tunnel collapsed because of severe flooding.
The two missing workers were operating dredging machines for the Hydraulics Construction Corporation No.4, he said.
“The other main parts [of the dam] are not damaged and are operating safely,” he said.
The reservoir began to collect water on September 25.
The 100-MW plant belongs to the Power Generation Corporation No.2 and has two turbines that generate more than 425 million KWh a year.
Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on July 25, 2016 at 5:53am

http://www.myjoyonline.com/news/2016/July-24th/floods-destroy-major...

Floods destroy major dams at Builsa; residents count losses
 
Date: 24-07-2016 Time: 06:07:44:pm

The Kaasa dam at Siniesi in the Builsa North District of the Upper East Region has dried up after a portion of its bank collapsed following massive floods.

One other dam at Balansa is on the verge of collapse. These followed a recent downpour that led to serious floods in the area. The downpour started last Wednesday dawn and lasted for at least twelve hours.

Residents are counting their losses, days after the floods, even as more rains continue to fall.

The dam which serves Siniesi and other surrounding communities in the Kaasa town is a major source of water for cropping and for animals.

Builsa North flooods

The little water left continues to run out of the dam, through the collapsed portion of its bank, into open community lands, as community members look on helplessly.

Assembly man for the area, Clement Akampaaba says if the dams are not repaired in time, it would affect dry season farming there.

“If the dam is not repaired, we will definitely lose our animals (in the dry season) because there is no other source of water and they will go looking for water elsewhere, and we are not sure we will get all of them back”, Akampaaba said.

Government Officials Tour Affected Areas

Member of Parliament for the area, James Agalga together with the Upper East Regional Minister, Albert Abongo, the DCE for Builsa North and NADMO officials toured the flood-affected areas on Saturday

The tour revealed that several communities had been cut off from the rest of the Builsa North district, as many trunk roads were destroyed by the floods.

District chief executive for Builsa North, Bonaventure Adangabey said the destruction caused by the floods was enormous

He said the Chuchuliga Rice Support Project (about 52 acres of rice farm) “has been washed away”

“Roads are destroyed. Teachers cannot get to school and the children cannot also cross. So it is a serious challenge for us”, Mr. Adangabey lamented

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on July 16, 2016 at 1:42am

http://purbelinews.net/2016/07/15/kaligandaki-subsidiary-dam-collap...

Kaligandaki ‘A’ subsidiary dam collapses

Published Date: Friday, 15 Jul, 2016

Rampur (Palpa), July 15: A subsidiary dam of the Kaligandaki ‘A’ Hydro Power Project, the country’s biggest, has collapsed under pressure of incessant rainfall and endangered the Andhimuhan locality. 

The wall of the dam built by the District Development Committee a few years ago has collapsed. At least 12 households are in risk of landslide at Andhimuhan of Sri Krishna Gandaki VDC – 7 after swollen Andhikhola river breached its regular course. They are facing an urgent need to be relocated to safer zone. The swollen Andhikhola has eroded the settlement area in and around it, said a local of the area, Rumadevi Basyal. The river also threatens to knock down a suspension bridge connecting Sri Krishna Gandaki VDC and Nibuwakharka VDC. DDC has said it will resort to solving the problem after an inspection. 

Comment by KM on July 14, 2016 at 4:58am

http://earth-chronicles.com/natural-catastrophe/in-the-south-east-o...

In the South-East of China dam burst

bea82a1f8b6923fb3f6d4cc2b1131250

In the Chinese province of Hunan, floods have been a breakthrough of the dam. The authorities urgently evacuated from the disaster area 10 thousand people.

The incident occurred in the County, Huarong city Yueyang County. According to the flood control and drought of Hunan province, the size of the hole in the dam is about 10 meters. According to local authorities in total in the disaster area live more than 27 thousand people.

The floods, caused by heavy rains across the country evacuated about 150 million people. Destroyed 56 million homes. In General, the result of natural disasters suffered 1.2 thousand counties in 26 provinces.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on June 24, 2016 at 12:07am

http://earth-chronicles.com/natural-catastrophe/in-china-dam-burst-...

In China dam burst evacuated 10 thousand people

BY SPACE · JUNE 23, 2016

dd3f331373febc21f8b38d80bf408c36
Heavy rains in the Pokolbin district of the Jiangxi province led to the exit of the banks of a large reservoir Bintang, bringing in the flood zone were thousands of private homes.

Rescue services promptly evacuated more than 5.6 thousand villagers living near the reservoir. Thanks to prompt actions of rescuers managed to avoid numerous victims among the local population.

As reported in the administration of Jiangxi province, the water gradually decreases, however, the situation in certain areas remains extremely challenging. Most of the rivers overflowed, destroyed thousands of houses, flooded thousands of hectares of crops.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dd7j7tqF-Po

“The water rose to 2 meters in just a few hours. My wife climbed onto the roof and wait for rescuers”, — told reporters about the incident, one of the villagers in Jiangxi province.

In neighboring Hunan province evacuated about 18.5 thousand people in Guizhou authorities evacuated from dangerous areas more than 1,5 thousand local residents. Adverse weather conditions have been established for more than 10 days ago. On June 21 the National meteorological Bureau of China reported that the improvement in the weather will occur no earlier than June 30.

In the period from 18 to 21 June in the floods in the East and South of the country killed 22 people, 15 people missing.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on June 5, 2016 at 12:26am

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2016/06/04/dozens-of-houses-floo...

Dozens of houses flooded as dam collapses

  • News Desk

    The Jakarta Post

Jakarta | Sat, June 4 2016 | 12:11 pmWorkers work to finish the construction of a temporary dam following the collapse of a dam near Pantai Mutia, Penjaringan, North Jakarta.(kompas.com/David Oliver Purba )

The collapse of a dam near Pantai Mutiara, Pluit, Penjaringan, in North Jakarta, flooded dozens of houses in a plush residential area.

The incident started at 8:30 a.m. on Friday.

“The dam collapse occurred in high waves because of erosion under the bridge and dam,” said the head of Jakarta City Water Management, Teguh Hendarwan, as reported by kompas.com.

About a 50-meter length of the dam collapsed, said Teguh, who inspected the location on Friday night.

Because of the dam collapse, as many as 124 houses near Pantai Mutiara were inundated by water on Friday. “Four blocks of houses were affected,” said Pluit subdistrict head Purnama early Saturday, adding that there were no reports of casualties.

Personnel from the military, police, rescue teams, fire departments and volunteers worked to build a temporary dam to prevent sea water from flowing farther into the area.

When the incident occurred, the water level reached up to 200 centimeters, but by 1:10 a.m. the water level had receded to only some 50 centimeters,kompas.com reported.

Meanwhile, the construction of the temporary dam was finished at about 3 a.m. on Saturday.

Four mobile water pumps had been operated since 5 a.m. to help pump water from the residential area. “Last night, we could not operate the pump because the water level was still quite high,” said a worker from Jakarta City Water Management. The water level reached only 30 centimeters by about 8 a.m

Comment by Howard on March 30, 2016 at 3:14am

Huge Disaster in Greece as Sparmos Dam Fails (Mar 27)

Thousands of cubic meters of water rushed to the plane of Elassona, destroying roads and fields after the Sparmos Dam failed Sunday afternoon.

The water momentum was so huge that the road pavement was ripped apart.

Source

http://geotechpedia.com/News/Show/549/Huge-disaster-in-Mount-Olympu...

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on March 18, 2016 at 12:07am

http://www.dailyitem.com/news/worker-hurt-during-possible-collapse/...

Worker hurt during possible collapse

SHAMOKIN DAM — A construction employee at the former Sunbury Generation power plant was injured Thursday morning while working on support columns.

Shamokin Dam Fire Chief Jon Gray said the unidentified worker was in a harness on steel columns about 40 feet above ground when the structure possibly collapsed to about 15 feet above ground at 7:45 a.m.

The man, who appeared to be in his 20s or 30s, may have suffered a medical emergency and was taken to a hospital, Gray said.

No other details were available.

Jeremy Carlson, site manager at Shamokin Dam Construction, would not release any information about the worker’s condition or say whether Occupational Safety and Health Administration had begun an investigation.

“I am not at liberty to discuss it,” Carlson said.

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