Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Fairbairn Dam

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Country
  
Australia

Construction began
  
1968

Height
  
46 m

Catchment area
  
16,320 km²

Status
  
Operational

Area
  
150 km²

Surface elevation
  
204 m

Inflow source
  
Nogoa River


Location
  
southwest of Emerald, Central Queensland

Purpose
  
Irrigation, water supply, flood mitigation

Opening date
  
December 1972 (1972-12)

Similar
  
Theresa Creek Dam, Wuruma Dam, Paradise Dam, Peter Faust Dam, Boondooma Dam

The Fairbairn Dam is an earthfill-filled embankment dam across the Nogoa River, located southwest of Emerald in Central Queensland, Australia. Constructed in 1972 for the primary purpose of irrigation, the impoundment created by the dam serves as one the major potable water supplies for the region and assists with some flood mitigation. Lake Maraboon with an active capacity of 1,301,000 ML (2.86×1011 imp gal; 3.44×1011 US gal) was formed by damming of the Nogoa River, and, in 2008, was Queensland's second largest dam. Maraboon is the Aboriginal for "where the black ducks fly".

Contents

Map of Lake Maraboon, Queensland, Australia

Location and features

Commenced in 1968, the dam was engineered by Snowy Mountains Hydro-Electric Authority and completed in December 1972 for the purposes of irrigation and water storage. Storage of water commenced in January 1972 and the dam filled and overflowed for the first time two years later. The dam wall consists of a 5,249 thousand cubic metres (185.4×10^6 cu ft) earthfill embankment 823 metres (2,700 ft) in length and 46 metres (151 ft) high. The reservoir has a catchment area of 16,320 square kilometres (6,300 sq mi) with an uncontrolled concrete spillway capable of discharging 15,580 cubic metres per second (550,000 cu ft/s). The reservoir has an active capacity of 1,301,000 ML (2.86×1011 imp gal; 3.44×1011 US gal) of water; When the dam spills over it flows into the Nogoa River.

About 300 irrigators are supplied with water for cotton, citrus and other horticulture operations. The dam is relatively shallow with large areas of standing timber. There are no boating restrictions and one concrete boat ramp.

Water from the Fairbairn Dam is released down the Nogoa River to the Selma Weir for supply to the town of Emerald. Supplies are diverted by pipelines to the towns of Blackwater, Bluff, Tieri, Dysart and Middlemount. Water from the dam also supplies coal mining developments on the Bowen Basin.

The dam and reservoir are operated by SunWater.

Water storage levels

In July 2003, cotton farmers who were reliant on the dam for irrigation had their water allocation cut by 75%. In November 2006, the dam had reached its lowest level ever—just 14% of total capacity. Over that summer low inflows and high evaporation rates had dropped levels to 12%.

On 18 January 2008 water in the reservoir overflowed the dam spillway for the first time in 17 years, due to heavy local rain. Within 48 hours, the water level was about 3.5 metres (11 ft) over the spillway level, or 156% of active capacity. The water level peaked at about 4.5 metres (15 ft) on 22 January 2008. Downstream 2,700 residents had to be evacuated due to flooding. Seven days earlier, the lake was operating at 29% of full capacity.

On 30 December 2010 during the 2010–2011 Queensland floods, the Fairbairn Dam reached a peak of 2,289,129 ML (5.03538×1011 imp gal; 6.04724×1011 US gal), or 176% of active capacity, with a reservoir elevation of 209.81 metres (688.4 ft) AHD . Water was recorded at 5.58 metres (18.3 ft) above the spillway.

Fishing

The lake has been stocked with barramundi, Mary River cod, southern saratoga, bass and silver perch. Eel-tailed catfish, spangled perch, red claw crayfish, sooty grunter and golden perch Georgia fish are additionally present. On the lake fishing is banned within 200 metres (660 ft) of the dam wall, while below the ban extends for 400 metres (1,300 ft).

References

Fairbairn Dam Wikipedia