Summary Report - Lake Winnipeg, Churchill and Nelson Rivers Study Board

Call number TC 426.5.M3 Summary report The people and industries of Manitoba as in all areas of North America are demanding more and more electrical energy every year. The demand in Manitoba has more than doubled in the last decade (Figure 1) and there is reason to believe that it will double again...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lake Winnipeg, Churchill and Nelson Rivers Study Board
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Government of Manitoba, Government of Canada 1975
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/23916
Description
Summary:Call number TC 426.5.M3 Summary report The people and industries of Manitoba as in all areas of North America are demanding more and more electrical energy every year. The demand in Manitoba has more than doubled in the last decade (Figure 1) and there is reason to believe that it will double again in the next 10 years. In parallel with the accelerating demand for electrical energy, there is an ever increasing awareness of the need to preserve Manitoba's natural environment and to allocate its natural resources with a view to benefiting Manitobans now and in the future. Satisfying the demands of Manitobans for electrical energy and for environmental quality requires advance planning and compromise. The Government of Manitoba decided in 1966 to proceed with developments to harness the potential energy of the Nelson River and to add to that potential by diverting a major part of the Churchill River flow into the Nelson River. The hydroelectric development program included a generating station at Kettle Rapids, a high voltage transmission line from the Nelson River to Winnipeg, regulation of the outflow from Lake Winnipeg and diversion of substantia l flow from the Churchill River into the Nelson River. The Kettle generating station and the transmission line have been completed. The Lake Winnipeg regulation and Churchill River diversion projects are under construction. The governments of Canada and Manitoba, recognizing the overall interest and conflict over the use of the water and related resources, initiated the Lake Winnipeg, Churchill and Nelson Introduction Rivers study. The study was intended to determine the effects which the regulation and diversion projects are likely to have on other water and related resource uses, to indicate ways in which the projects may prove beneficial to such other uses, to recommend modifications in the design and operation of the works, and to recommend remedial measures where considered necessary to lessen undesirable effects. The study took over three years to complete at a ...