KNOXVILLE, Tenn., July 10 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Tennessee Valley Authority is working to move large volumes of water -- as much as 1 million gallons per second in some places -- along the Tennessee River system to reduce potentially damaging flooding from record rainfall.
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TVA prepared for this event by lowering reservoir levels on the main channel of the Tennessee River beginning the last week of June, leaving some areas below normal for this time of year.
However, extreme rainfall and runoff in the middle and eastern portions of the Tennessee Valley over the past week are now forcing TVA to spill or release excess water from 10 of 20 tributary dams and all nine main channel dams along the 652-mile Tennessee River.
"TVA's management of the river system is working," said Chuck Bach, general manager of TVA River Operations. "TVA will spill only when all available hydroelectric-generating turbines are operating at full capacity and additional water still needs to be moved."
Spilling along the dams is expected to last one to two weeks. As this water moves through the system, agricultural crops planted in floodplain areas along the Tennessee River in Northern Alabama and West Tennessee will be impacted by higher than normal water elevations.
"Some crop fields near the banks of the Tennessee River will see up to six to eight feet of water," Bach said. "Crops along the Tennessee River on Kentucky Reservoir will be impacted the most."
Because of flooding and high water flows on the Ohio and upper Mississippi rivers, water releases out of the Tennessee River system into the Ohio River at Kentucky Dam have been reduced. TVA is in close contact with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which manages the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, and when flood stages there drop, more will be allowed to be discharged from Kentucky Dam.
Within the Tennessee River system, there have been reports of flooding in Chattanooga; Whitesburg and Florence, Ala.; and Savannah, Tenn., near Pickwick Reservoir.
Some recreational areas along the Tennessee River have been temporarily closed because of high water. Recreation areas on Douglas and Watauga reservoirs in Tennessee and Wilson reservoir near Florence, Ala., are among those most impacted.
"We advise using extreme caution when near the dams, rivers and tributaries," Bach said. "Safety is the No. 1 priority, and river currents and speed are unpredictable."
Watauga Reservoir, near Elizabethton Tenn., set a record lake elevation on Monday at 1,967 feet above sea level -- about a foot higher than the previous record set last May.
A forecast of additional rain later in the week could add one or two more inches of water into the already-flooded system.
The Tennessee River watershed has one of the highest annual rainfall totals of any watershed in the United States, averaging 51 inches a year. So far in 2013, more than 40 inches of rain has fallen in the Valley.
TVA manages the Tennessee River and its many tributaries to meet vital public needs in six key areas: navigation, flood damage reduction, power production, water quality and supply, recreation and land use.
The Tennessee Valley Authority is a corporate agency of the United States that provides electricity for business customers and local power distributors serving 9 million people in parts of seven southeastern states. TVA receives no taxpayer funding, deriving virtually all of its revenues from sales of electricity. In addition to operating and investing its revenues in its electric system, TVA provides flood control, navigation and land management for the Tennessee River system and assists local power companies and state and local governments with economic development and job creation.
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Video of TVA dams releasing water is posted at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YZLlxBpXGUM
SOURCE Tennessee Valley Authority
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