Puneet Varma (Editor)

Driekloof Dam

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Official name
  
Driekloof Dam

Impounds
  
Nuwejaar Spruit

Height
  
47 m

Opening date
  
1979

Length
  
500 m (1,600 ft)

Opened
  
1979

Driekloof Dam staticpanoramiocomphotosmedium72495877jpg

Location
  
Free State, South Africa

Operator(s)
  
Department of Water Affairs and Forestry / Eskom

Similar
  
Kilburn Dam, Woodstock Dam, Sterkfontein Dam, Bezuidenhouts Pass, Welbedacht Dam

Driekloof Dam is a small section of the Sterkfontein Dam, Free State, South Africa. A section of the Sterkfontein Dam reservoir is isolated after the construction of Driekloof Dam, this small reservoir has a capacity of 35.6 million cubic metres (28,900 acre·ft)., together with the Kilburn Dam almost 500 metres (1,600 ft) lower, Driekloof forms part of Eskom's Drakensberg Pumped Storage Scheme and Tugela-Vaal Water Project, and provides for up to 27.6 gigawatt-hours (99 TJ) of electricity storage in the form of 275 million cubic metres (9.7×10^9 cu ft) of water. The water is pumped to Driekloof during times of low national power consumption (generally over weekends) and released back into Kilburn through four 250 megawatts (340,000 hp) turbine generators in times of high electricity demand.

Map of Driekloof Dam, South Africa

The scheme is operated in such a way that there is a net pumping of up to 631 million cubic metres (512,000 acre·ft)/annum depending upon the water availability in the Tugela catchment (Woodstock Dam) as well as the need for augmentation in the Vaal Dam catchment.

The Driekloof Dam was commissioned in 1979, has a capacity of 32,071 cubic metres (26.000 acre·ft), and a surface area of 1.906 square kilometres (0.736 sq mi), the Dam wall is 47 metres (154 ft) high.

References

Driekloof Dam Wikipedia