Follow the Drop – Hydro Power Plant

Hydro Power Plant, follow the drop

Hydro Power Plant

Fun Fact

Dams store water behind them: Many lakes and reservoirs are created or raised by the damming of naturally flowing streams. Examples you may have heard of include the Spray Lakes, Two Jack Lake, the Kananaskis lakes, Ghost Reservoir, the Glenmore reservoirs, and Chestermere Lake.

Hydro Power Plant, follow the drop

Definition

Turbine: A machine for producing continuous power by making a wheel or rotor revolve by a fast-moving flow of water, steam, gas, air, or other fluid.

Where next?

Despite the negatives associated with hydro power plants, some dams in Alberta create higher water quality in our rivers by releasing stored water that dilutes wastewater or other inputs downstream. 

Although water is not directly consumed by the generation of hydroelectric power, significantly more evaporation occurs from the large surface of a reservoir compared to the surface of a river.  Evaporation is therefore one of your next options. You can also choose to flow through a turbine and continue your journey downstream into the middle section of the Bow River.

Learn more about energy in Alberta on the Nexus Energy page.

References and Further Reading

  1. Energy Education. (2018). Water quality degradation from hydropower. Retrieved May 21, 2020, from https://energyeducation.ca/encyclopedia/Water_quality_degradation_from_hydropower