Dickson Dam

Dickson Dam is a flow regulation dam constructed in 1983 which impounded the Red Deer River creating a reservoir known as Gleniffer Lake (Alberta).[1] The dam is located 20 km (12 mi) west of the town of Innisfail and 50 km (31 mi) southwest of the city of Red Deer. The dam was created to control for floods and low winter flows, to improve quality of the river, to create a recreational resource and to provide a reliable, year-round water supply sufficient for future industrial, regional and municipal growth.[2]

Dickson Dam
Location of Dickson Dam in Alberta
CountryCanada
LocationRed Deer County, Alberta
Coordinates52°03′06″N 114°13′07″W
Power Station
Commission dateJanuary 16, 1992
Installed capacity15 MW

Generation

The dam is owned by the Government of Alberta. Algonquin Power owns a small hydropower station that was added to the dam. It consists of three 5 MW Barber turbines with Ideal Generators. Commercial operations began on January 16, 1992. Water management of the reservoir is directed by the provincial Ministry of Environment and Water. All water control structures at the site, including the dam, intake, headgates, and spillway, are owned by the Province of Alberta and administered by Alberta Environment and Water,[3]

Under the Dickson Power Purchase Agreement signed in 1990, all electrical power generated by the facility is sold to TransAlta Utilities Corporation. The 20-year contract expires on January 16, 2012.

Low reservoir water levels were a concern in 2010.[4]

Gleniffer Reservoir Provincial Recreation Area

In the summer of 2009, Alberta Tourism, Parks and Recreation consolidated six provincial recreation areas (PRAs) at Dickson Dam and around Gleniffer Lake (Dickson Dam–Cottonwood PRA, Dickson Dam–Dickson Point PRA, Dickson Dam–North Dyke PRA, Dickson Dam–South Dyke PRA, Dickson Dam–North Valley PRA, Dickson Dam–South Valley PRA) into one PRA renamed Gleniffer Reservoir PRA.[5] Motorboating, waterskiing, swimming, and sailboarding are allowed. There are rainbow trout in a trout pond.[6] Pike, walleye, Rocky Mountain whitefish, and brown trout are also found nearby.[7]

gollark: Somewhat bad, in my IMO opinion.
gollark: It's actually quaternionic.
gollark: To some extent I guess you could ship worse/nonexistent versions of some machinery and assemble it there, but a lot would be interdependent so I don't know how much. And you'd probably need somewhat better computers to run something to manage the resulting somewhat more complex system, which means more difficulty.
gollark: Probably at least 3 hard. Usefully extracting the many ores and such you want from things, and then processing them into usable materials probably involves a ton of different processes you have to ship on the space probe. Then you have to convert them into every different part you might need, meaning yet more machinery. And you have to do this with whatever possibly poor quality resources you find, automatically with no human to fix issues, accurately enough to reach whatever tolerances all the stuff needs, and have it stand up to damage on route.
gollark: 3.00005.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-04-18. Retrieved 2012-06-17.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-09. Retrieved 2012-06-17.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. http://www.algonquinpower.com/business/facility/hydroelectric_dickson.asp Archived 2010-08-22 at the Wayback Machine Official website
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-07-18. Retrieved 2010-12-14.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. "Town of Bowden Alberta | Tourist Information | Visitor Information | Bowden Campgrounds | Red Lodge Guest Ranch | Bowden Daze | Pioneer Museum | Bowden Sunmaze".
  6. http://sportfisherman.net/sportfish/lakes-rivers/alberta/dickson_dam/dickson.htm


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