Campos Novos Dam
Encyclopedia
The Campos Novos Dam is a hydroelectric dam in Santa Catarina province in southern Brazil
Brazil
Brazil , officially the Federative Republic of Brazil , is the largest country in South America. It is the world's fifth largest country, both by geographical area and by population with over 192 million people...

. In 2006, at 200m dam height, it was regarded as the third highest dam of this type (concrete-faced rockfill dam or CFRD) in the world, but, in June 2006, the water which it held back ran out following a break in the dam wall.

Built at the cost of $671 million USD, it is located on the Canoas River
Canoas River (Santa Catarina)
The Canoas River is a river of Santa Catarina state in southeastern Brazil. The river joins the Pelotas River to form the Uruguay River.-See also:*List of rivers of Santa Catarina-References:* ] map]...

, Brazil. It is part of a hydro-electric complex intended to provide 880 MW. A second dam is below this one, and together they can hold a little more than 2 cubic kilometers of water.

Ownership and Construction

Campos Novos' 35 years build and operate concession was awarded in 1998. It is owned by Enercan, a consortium made up of Brazilian power company CPFL Energia with 48.7%, Brazilian aluminium maker CBA with 22.7%, metallurgy company CNT with 20%, state-controlled companies Rio Grande do Sul with 6.5% and Santa Catarina Celesc with 2%.

The dam builder was a consortium led by Brazilian construction company Camargo Correa and engineering consultants Engevix. Funding is by Inter-American Development Bank and Brazilian state-owned National Bank for Economic and Social Development.

Cracks

A major break caused the water to begin to run out, after a tunnel collapsed on 20 June 2006. The exact reasons for the cracking were unknown in July 2006, however it has been revealed that patches were begun on another tunnel in October 2005 before the recent tunnel failure.

Since the dam failure, a full inquiry for the reasons behind the cracks has been done, and a time-line of the dam's progression towards failure has been completed. Following this discovery, hidden by the partners of the project, it appeared that these companies had maltreated the local populations. An investigation into the human rights violations was launched by United Nations Organisation .

Camargo Corrêa re-plugged the tunnels in November 2006 and the reservoir was refilled by 1 March 2007. The last of the three generators went on-line on 30 April 2007.

See also


External links

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