Neha Patil (Editor)

John Butters Power Station

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Country
  
Australia

Purpose
  
Power

Opening date
  
1991 (1991)

Height
  
83 m

Length
  
245 m

Create
  
Lake Burbury

Location
  
Western Tasmania

Status
  
Operational

Type of dam
  
Embankment dam

Opened
  
1991

Catchment area
  
559 km²

Owner
  
Hydro Tasmania

John Butters Power Station

Address
  
Queenstown TAS 7467, Australia

Similar
  
Crotty Dam, Gordon Power Station, Mount Jukes, Mount Huxley, Mount Sedgwick

The John Butters Power Station is a conventional hydroelectric power station located in Western Tasmania, Australia. The power station forms part of the King – Yolande River Power Scheme and is owned and operated by Hydro Tasmania.

Contents

Technical details

Part of the King – Yolande scheme that comprises three hydroelectric power stations, the John Butters Power Station is fed by water from Lake Burbury which is dammed by the Crotty Dam in the gap in the West Coast Range between Mount Jukes and Mount Huxley, and to the south by Darwin Dam. Water flow to the station is via a long headrace tunnel from the Crotty Dam via a 6.5-kilometre (4.0 mi)-long headrace tunnel and a 500-metre (1,600 ft)-long steel lined power tunnel.

The power station was commissioned in 1992 by the Hydro Electric Corporation (TAS), one of the last power stations constructed before its disaggregation and transformation to Hydro Tasmania. The station has one Fuji Francis turbines with a generating capacity of 144 megawatts (193,000 hp) of electricity. Within the station building, the turbine has a half embedded spiral casing controlled via a spherical rotary inlet valve and a vertical lift, gravity closed intake gate designed to cut off full flow. The station output, estimated to be 576 gigawatt-hours (2,070 TJ) annually, is fed to TasNetworks' transmission grid via a 13.8 kV/220 kV three-phase Fuji generator transformer to the outdoor switchyard.

The station is remotely controlled from the Sheffield Control Centre.

Etymology

The power station was named in honour of John Butters, the first general manager and chief engineer of Hydro Tasmania.

When the King power scheme was approved by the Tasmanian Government the name on hydro plans for the proposed power station at that time was the 'Newell Power station'.

References

John Butters Power Station Wikipedia