Lodi News-Sentinel

Report: Two dozen problems could have caused Oroville Dam failure

- By Ralph Vartabedia­n

The massive failure of the Oroville Dam’s main spillway in February involved two dozen potential design and maintenanc­e problems, including thin concrete, inadequate reinforcin­g steel and weaknesses in the foundation, a panel of engineerin­g experts reported Wednesday.

A forensic investigat­ion team said it was issuing a preliminar­y list of causes so that engineers do not repeat the problems as they rush to fix the Northern California spillway before the next cycle of rains begins in November.

The two-page report does not identify what initiated the failure along the 3,000foot chute that was used to drain the reservoir during massive winter storms. But it makes clear that the spillway is structural­ly too weak to handle the massive loads it sustained when dam operators opened the spill gates.

“The list is long,” said David Gutierrez, one of state’s top dam safety experts who retired from the Department of Water Resources af- ter 37 years and is now consulting on the safety investigat­ion. He said that not all of the 24 factors will likely be cited as causing the failure, but he added that no single problem likely caused the failure either.

“You wouldn’t design it today as you would back then,” Gutierrez said.

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which has oversight of Oroville Dam, ordered the Department of Water Resources to conduct an official investigat­ion, which began in March with the six-member forensic team.

The spillway is a key part of the dam, allowing large discharges of water when the reservoir is nearly full.

It began failing Feb. 7 when dam operators opened gates that sent 55,000 cubic feet of water per second roaring out of the reservoir after days of continuous rain drenched the Feather River watershed. That amount is a fraction of the spillway’s designed capacity of 300,000 cubic feet per second.

The entire lower section of the spillway eroded away, and the rushing water then eroded soft rock on the slope. Gutierrez said that section will be rebuilt this year, and the upper section of the spillway will likely be replaced next year.

The repairs for all the damage will cost about $500 million.

Oroville Dam operators began using the damaged spillway again at 9 a.m. Wednesday and will continue discharges for the next 10 to 15 days. They hope that will be the last time the spillway is needed until next fall, so that constructi­on crews can move in equipment and start rebuilding the structure.

The reservoir can also be lowered by discharges through the dam’s power plant, but one of the two power plant outlets, known as penstocks, was shut down for routine maintenanc­e of turbines. That should be reopened by late May, allowing dam operators to control the reservoir level as the Sierra Nevada snowpack melts this summer.

The forensic team report covers design, maintenanc­e and operation factors as possible causes of the failure.

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