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Yuba County Water Authority
Narrows 2 Hydro Power Plant Flow Bypass Project
2008 OSAW Award Winner
Recreational, Historical & Environmental Enhancement

Summary | Background | Challenge | Innovation | Results | Stakeholder Quotes

Summary
The Yuba County Water Agency’s Narrows 2 Flow Bypass demonstrates how utilities can work with state and federal organizations and other stakeholders to protect threatened species and enhance their own operations. The $12.2 million, 18-month effort overcame dam safety, engineering, scheduling, operation, and environmental challenges. Today the project maintains optimum flow and water temperature to sustain valuable fisheries.

Through this project, Yuba County created a way to protect threatened spring-run Chinook salmon and help to preserve the last self-sustaining wild steelhead population in California’s Central Valley. By maintaining a steady flow of cold water, even during emergencies, the project benefits fish-spawning grounds downstream on the Yuba River.

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Background
The Yuba River is home to several threatened species. Aside from supporting the Central Valley’s last self-sustaining wild steelhead population, the river has an extensive spawning area downstream of Englebright Dam that supports spring-run Chinook salmon and steelhead trout, both of which are listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. Maintaining water levels and temperature conditions, especially during spawning season, is critical to the survival of these species.

Although the Narrows 2 power plant incorporates features that provide cold water releases and water-level management options that benefit downstream fisheries, these features do not function during plant or transmission-system outages. Water levels can drop and temperatures can rise at such times, adversely affecting the spawning grounds. Yuba County built the Narrows 2 Flow Bypass project to avoid this by automatically maintaining flow and temperature during emergencies.

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Challenge
There were many challenges in retrofitting the bypass to the existing dam and powerhouse. They ranged from design to safety and included the need to lessen the environmental footprint during construction.

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Innovation
In meeting the challenge of this project, Yuba County Water Agency took some innovative approaches.

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Results
The project was successfully implemented without adversely affecting downstream fish spawning habitat, providing a lasting improvement for fish habitat and helping to protect important fish species for future generations. In addition, the project resulted in significant accomplishments.

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Stakeholder Quotes
During a tour of the completed project in April 2007 held for resource agencies, stakeholders, and the public the following two quotes lauding the project were reported in local newspapers.

“The valve will improve the reliability of fish reproduction by keeping enough cool water flowing over the gravel where fish lay their eggs."

- Ryan Broddrick
Director
California Fish and Game

“It's an exciting development. This should improve strandings and should be an overall improvement for the Yuba salmon."

- Jason Rainey
Executive Director
South Yuba River Citizens League

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A rainbow emerges from Engelbright Dam and the Narrows 2 Powerhouse. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers constructed the dam in 1941 to protect the lower part of the Yuba River from sediment and debris.



A bypass system was designed and installed at the Narrows 2 Powerhouse.  Completed in January 2007, the bypass improved reliability by automatically maintaining flow and water temperature in the Yuba River during emergencies.


From left to right: NHA President Leslie Eden, Yuba County Water Authority President John Nicoletti, Steve Onken,
Yuba County Water Authority General Manager Curt Aiken, and Julie
Smith-Galvin of Brookfield Power.