In July of 2005, cracks began forming in the concrete dam that created Duke Lake in Ryerson Station State Park in Pennsylvania that required officials to drain the 62-acre lake. The state’s Department of Environmental Protection has demanded that the company operating an underground coal mine at the location of the dam pay over $21M in damages. The state’s report ruled out other possible causes of cracks concluding that the only feasible cause was the longwall mining which took place during that time. Engineering firm Gannett Fleming Inc. is currently working on designs for replacement of the structure, no word on which company performed the report blaming the mining. [Source: www.observer-reporter.com via Association of State Dam Safety Officials. Image: Post-Gazette]
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$180 Million Settlement in Reservoir Failure
On December 14, 2005, the upper reservoir of the Taum Sauk pumped storage plant, a hydroelectric power plant in the Missouri Ozarks, suffered a catastrophic failure. The resulting flood severely damaged the Jonhson’s Shut-Ins State Park and swept away the park superintendent and his family. Fortunately all of them survived. (Photos by Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and USGS)
Last week, the Missouri Attorney General’s office announced a settlement of $180 million between the facility’s owner, Ameren Corp. The failure reportedly was a result of negligence on the part of the company. More details after the break.