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Dam Renovation to Prolong Reservoir Life and Mitigate Dam Impactsoa mark
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Publication Year
2022-05-01
Publisher
MDPI
Citation
Water (Switzerland), Vol.14
Keyword
dam rehabilitationdam removaldam renovationfishwaysriver restorationsediment flushingsediment sluicingsustainable sediment management
Mesh Keyword
Dam impactsDam rehabilitationDam removalDam renovationReservoir storageRiver restorationSediment flushingSediment managementSediment sluicingSustainable sediment management
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
BiochemistryGeography, Planning and DevelopmentAquatic ScienceWater Science and Technology
Abstract
Dams are essential to society, yet have tremendous environmental impacts, for which there is an increasing interest in mitigation. At the same time, sedimentation threatens the sustainability of reservoir storage and reservoir functions. We use the term dam renovation to encompass a wide range of measures, including dam rehabilitation, a term commonly used for structural retrofits, typically of the dam structure or spillway, fishway retrofits for migratory fish passage, reservoir reoperation, which involves modifying dam operations to improve flow regimes for ecological purposes, and sustainable sediment management, which includes measures to pass sediment through or around dams, as well as other mechanical measures to restore sediment connectivity. Compared to dam renovation, an inordinate amount of literature has been published on the topic of dam removal. While in some cases dam removal is a practical way to improve river condition and to resolve the safety problems of aging dams, the reality is that most dams in existence today will remain for the foreseeable future, provided they do not fill with sediment, or their structures deteriorate to the point of failure. Thus, it is imperative that we understand the options available to renovate dams with poor environmental performance or whose sustainability is threatened.
ISSN
2073-4441
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/32693
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w14091464
Fulltext

Type
Review
Funding
Funding: This research was funded by the Korea Water Resources Association. Manuscript preparation was supported by the Beatrix Farrand Fund of the University of California Berkeley Department of Landscape Architecture.
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YI, Jae Eung Image
YI, Jae Eung이재응
Department of Civil Systems Engineering
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