Potter Valley Project


The Potter Valley Project is an interbasin water transfer project in Northern California in the United States, delivering water from the Eel River basin to the headwaters of the Russian River. The project is owned and operated by Pacific Gas and Electric Company. The main facilities are two dams on the Eel River, a diversion tunnel and hydroelectric plant. Average annual throughput is, although this figure varies significantly with both the amount of precipitation in the Eel River basin and the demand on the Russian River.

History

Construction on the project began in 1900, when the natural flow of the Russian River was no longer enough to meet growing agricultural and urban demands. The Eel River Power and Irrigation Company constructed the Cape Horn Dam and a one-mile, -diameter tunnel under the drainage divide to Potter Valley, at the headwaters of the East Branch of the Russian River. The water dropped to a powerhouse before being released to the Russian River. On April 1, 1908, the first deliveries were made and power production began with a then-installed capacity of 4000 kilowatts. In 1910, the generation capacity was boosted to 7000 KW and in 1912 second penstock was built to increase the flow capacity of the tunnel. The powerhouse was finally upgraded to its present capacity of 9400 KW in 1917, after the addition of a fourth unit.
Initially, the project could only operate during the winter months, when there was enough water in the Eel River to divert without drying up the riverbed downstream. In 1920, Snow Mountain Water and Power began construction on a larger dam on the Eel River, upstream from Cape Horn. Scott Dam, which forms Lake Pillsbury, was completed in 1922. With its greater storage capacity, it provides water for the diversion during the summer months and also affords some flood control during winter storms. In 1930, ownership of the project was transferred to PG&E. In 1959, Coyote Valley Dam was built on the Russian River as part of the separate Russian River Basin Project, forming Lake Mendocino, which provides additional storage of diverted Eel River waters. This reservoir serves a critical function during dry years as it is drawn down to compensate for reduced diversions from the Eel River system.

Operations

The project derives water from a drainage basin of above Scott Dam and approximately between Scott Dam and Cape Horn Dam, where water is diverted to the Russian River. The vast majority of the water arrives as winter rain between December and April, with a smaller, less reliable amount furnished by snowmelt and groundwater through June. Scott Dam, which forms Lake Pillsbury, has a total storage capacity of. Project regulations require that the gates at Scott Dam be opened between October 16 and April 1, for safety reasons during the winter months. Winter storms fill the reservoir, which provides only very limited flood control, because the average annual runoff of is over five times the project storage capacity. It is not uncommon for the dams to spill eight or nine times during a single winter season. After the wet season passes, Lake Pillsbury is drawn down beginning April 1. Typical summer drawdowns leave the reservoir at or above, or 27 percent capacity. Water is released to Cape Horn Dam, which diverts the majority, while releasing a small flow to the Eel River designed to mimic natural summer flows. This is typically around, but can decrease significantly during dry years.

Beneficiaries

In 1924, the Potter Valley Irrigation District was formed to provide irrigation water to the farmers along the East Branch Russian River. The district currently serves 390 farmers with rights to of project water per year, for the irrigation of within a district boundary of. Because there is very little natural runoff in Potter Valley and the local geology is non-conducive to groundwater storage, the PVID is the only constituent that depends solely on Eel River water.
Project water also serves farmers and municipalities downstream along the Russian River, in Mendocino County. The total water use per year is about. Even further downstream, water users in Sonoma County use between per year. These users depend both on Potter Valley Project water and natural flows in the Russian River basin managed by the RRBP. In addition to agricultural, domestic and industrial uses, project water helps to maintain a minimum dry season flow of in the Russian River, serving for recreational, aesthetic and fishery enhancement purposes. Project water is estimated to provide at least part of the water supply for nearly 500,000 people living in Sonoma and Mendocino Counties, mainly in the North Bay area, for cities such as Santa Rosa.

Controversy

The Potter Valley Project has had a significant impact on summer low streamflows in the Eel River basin. Although the project taps water from only the upper 10% of the Eel River system, this headwaters region provides most of the summer flow in the lower Eel, especially during critically dry years, when only are allowed into the Eel River past the Cape Horn diversion point. As a result, summer-run salmon and steelhead in the Eel River are negatively affected during dry years. In addition, while Cape Horn Dam has a fish ladder, the larger Scott Dam blocks fish migration to about of habitat in the Eel River headwaters.
Although there has been an increased movement to decommission the project as part of a larger program to restore the Eel River's once-prodigious salmon and steelhead populations, the project has many dependencies that cannot be sustained by the natural flow of the Russian River alone. However, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission relicensing of the project on January 28, 2004 placed limits on the amount of water than can be diverted. In combination with drought conditions, diversions between 2004 and 2009 averaged, or 57% of the historical average. Since then, late summer water has been released from Cape Horn Dam at rates roughly mimicking or exceeding natural flows.