Hart-Jaune Dam – Wikipedia

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Dam in Quebec, Canada

Dam

Hart-Jaune Dam
Hart-Jaune Dam is located in Quebec

Hart-Jaune Dam

Location of Hart-Jaune Dam in Quebec

Official name Barrage de la Hart-Jaune
Coordinates 51°49′27″N 67°48′14″W / 51.824092°N 67.804019°W / 51.824092; -67.804019Coordinates: 51°49′27″N 67°48′14″W / 51.824092°N 67.804019°W / 51.824092; -67.804019
Type of dam Earthfill
Impounds Beaupré River
Height (foundation) 22.9 metres (75 ft)
Spillways 1
Creates Petit lac Manicouagan
Total capacity 1,430,000,000 cubic metres (5.0×1010 cu ft)
Catchment area 4,553 square kilometres (1,758 sq mi)
Surface area 25,160 hectares (62,200 acres).
Type of dam Earth fill
Impounds Hart Jaune River
Height (foundation) 24.7 metres (81 ft)
Dam volume 7,500,000 cubic metres (260,000,000 cu ft)
Coordinates 51°47′07″N 67°54′44″W / 51.785415°N 67.912261°W / 51.785415; -67.912261
Operator(s) Hydro Quebec
Commission date 1960
Turbines 3
Installed capacity 51 MW

The Hart-Jaune Dam (French: Barrage de la Hart-Jaune) is a dam in Quebec, Canada.
It crosses the Hart Jaune River where it leaves the Petit lac Manicouagan.
It regulates the flow of water to the 45.5 MW Hart-Jaune generating station.

Location[edit]

The Hart-Jaune Dam is in the unorganized territory of Rivière-Mouchalagane in Caniapiscau Regional County Municipality.
Below the dam the Hart Jaune River flows through Lac Uishaukaniss and through a secondary dam into the power plant’s reservoir.
It enters the Hart-Jaune generating station at the southwest end of the reservoir.
The dam is crossed by the Cartier Railway, which runs along the south shore of Petit lac Manicouagan.
An access road leads from Quebec Route 389 up the river to the lower dam, and continues to the upper dam on the lake.
The road is kept open year-round.

History[edit]

The dam and power plant have their origin on 26 January 1957 when the Québec Cartier Mining Company was created by U.S. Steel to supply iron ore concentrate.
On 21 February 1957 the Queen, with the advice and consent to the Legislative Council and the Legislative Assembly of Quebec, authorized leasing the water powers of the Hart-Jaune River and the Petit Lac Manicouagan, including the right to regulate the flow of the river and to store water in the lake.
The new company spent $325 million to build the Lake Jeannine mining site, with the nearby town of Gagnon and Hart-Jaune power station, as well as the Cartier Railway leading to a port at Port-Cartier from which the first load of iron ore concentrate was shipped in June 1961.

The company made further investments in the 1970s at Mont-Wright, Fermont and Fire Lake, but during a steel market crisis in 1979−1985 was forced to shut down Lac-Jeannine, Gagnon and Fire Lake.[a]
Hart Jaune was listed among Hydro Quebec’s generating stations in 1987.

In September 1998, following an environmental impact review, Hydro Quebec was given permission to undertake a back-filling project over a distance of 2,385 metres (7,825 ft) in Petit lac Manicouagan and the Hart Jaune river to rehabilitate the riprap protection of part of the upstream facing of the retaining structures for the Hart-Jaune complex.
In 2012 Hydro Quebec commissioned a digital microwave link between Hart-Jaune and Manic-5.
In July 2013 Hydro Quebec evacuated its personnel from the power station as a precautionary measure due to a major forest fire in the area.

Main dam[edit]

The upper dam was built in 1960. It is operated by Hydro-Québec.
It is in the basin of the Beaupré River, a tributary of the Manicouagan Reservoir.
The earthfill dam is 22.9 metres (75 ft) high and holds 1,430,000,000 cubic metres (5.0×1010 cu ft).
The reservoir covers 251.60 square kilometres (97.14 sq mi).
The watershed covers 4,553 square kilometres (1,758 sq mi).

Other structures[edit]

There is an intermediate dam between Lac Uishaukaniss and the reservoir of the power plant.
This dam carries the railway leading to Lake Jeannine, once the main line of the Cartier Railway.
There are several earthen structures on the reservoir about 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) below the main dam.
These include four dykes, a secondary dam that provides a high-water outlet for the river, and the water intake dam that feeds the power station.

Structure Coords Height Type Capacity
m3 cu ft
Dyke HJ-6 51°47′31″N 67°53′21″W / 51.791944°N 67.889167°W / 51.791944; -67.889167 0.8 metres (2 ft 7 in) dyke 0 0
Secondary dam 51°47′27″N 67°53′21″W / 51.790833°N 67.889167°W / 51.790833; -67.889167 4.8 metres (16 ft) dam 3,500,000 120,000,000
Dyke HJ-3 51°47′17″N 67°53′30″W / 51.788056°N 67.891667°W / 51.788056; -67.891667 4.8 metres (16 ft) dyke 3,200,000 110,000,000
Dyke HJ-2 51°47′07″N 67°54′00″W / 51.785278°N 67.9°W / 51.785278; -67.9 4.8 metres (16 ft) dyke 2,500,000 88,000,000
Dyke HJ-1 51°47′03″N 67°54′06″W / 51.784167°N 67.901667°W / 51.784167; -67.901667 1.7 metres (5 ft 7 in) dyke 0 0
Water intake dam 51°46′59″N 67°54′38″W / 51.783056°N 67.910556°W / 51.783056; -67.910556 24.7 metres (81 ft) dam 7,500,000 260,000,000

Generating station[edit]

The Hart-Jaune generating station has an installed capacity of 51 MW from 3 turbines.
It has a hydraulic head of 39.6 metres (130 ft).
It came into service in 1960.
In January the plant has a dependable maximum net capacity of 48 MW.
In an emergency the Hart Jaune Power plant, which is connected to the Hydro-Quebec grid, can supply enough power for the essential processing facilities in ArcelorMittal’s Mont-Wright facility.

  1. ^ In 1989 US Steel sold Quebec Cartier to a group consisting of Dofasco, Mitsui and Caemi. Dofasco acquired all the shares in 2005. In 2009 Quebec Cartier Dofasco became part of the steel giant ArcelorMittal.

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