Orville Dam on a map of California. Live webcams in Oroville, California. Forecast for the development of the situation in the near future


Residents of Oroville, California and surrounding areas are being ordered to evacuate their homes immediately as components of the Oroville Dam, the tallest dam in the United States, are experiencing severe structural collapse.

Damage to the main dam structure is expected within an hour. Once this structure is destroyed, over two cubic miles of water will be released. The flood will wipe out an entire area.

Oroville Reservoir is located 240 kilometers from San Francisco. The city of Oroville, located by the lake, is home to 16,000 people. The dam in question is the tallest in the United States, its height is 235 meters. The reservoir is also the main source of water for California, agriculture in the Central Valley and businesses in the state.

Old video clip showing what the Oroville Spillway should look like in normal operation:

This is what it looks like now:

If earlier the water extinguished its energy, smoothly flowing from a height of 770 feet, then today, after spontaneous damage to the spillway about a week ago

Due to a series of downpours that flooded the region, the lower part of the structure looks like a seething stream of water with flying blocks of reinforced concrete, eroding the surface down to the rocks.

Evacuation zone maps:

Here's what American bloggers think about the situation:

Flyingcuttlefish: Several years ago I spoke with a volunteer lifeguard from North Carolina. He secretly, fearing that someone would hear us, told me that they were conducting special exercises in case the dam upstream from a large populated area was destroyed. He even gave me an approximate date when this could happen. The rescuer’s words were not a surprise to me and only confirmed my suspicions. The fact is that in some strange coincidence it turned out that the United States Army of Engineers built more than 50% of their dams on the sites of active underground faults and in those places where large populations were gathered down the river. What if the dams were built this way on purpose - in anticipation of future events, natural disasters? Or even disasters launched artificially, for example using devices such as HAARP. If a flood kills a lot of people, destroys the local economy - HAARP can influence not just the weather, but politics.

Jim Stone: All dam maintenance records show that the spillway was in excellent condition not long ago. I've analyzed hours of CCTV footage of the dam, and in some of the frames you can see chunks of the deck's concrete appear to be jumping high in the air. So I think the spillway was blown. Or is this some kind of deliberate sabotage. Obviously, I have no evidence of deliberate digging under the drain or traces of explosives, but you must agree that this is a completely rational explanation. Even engineers are terribly surprised how this happened. And that means a lot. Therefore, I have doubts that everything will end well. If the dam fails, it will be a double Niagara Falls. Or even Niagara times four.

Based on materials


And so, judging by the video, the spillway simply cannot cope and began to collapse from such a flow of water

Therefore, engineers reduced the water discharge, and the water reached the emergency spillway. And it was used for the first time since the construction of the dam. But then there was another mistake from the engineers: the other side of the emergency spillway began to erode, which created the threat of its destruction with an understandable result.
And the media has already picked up the hysteria. The main dam, as far as I understand, is safe.

Original taken from antizoomby in Photos of drought in California.

Lake Oroville, California.

California is suffering from severe drought:
In May, 100% of California was facing a “severe” drought (rated at Level 3 out of 5). But after new numbers came in, that percentage was lowered to 99.8%, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.
Meanwhile, about 82% of California continues to face “extreme” drought, and more than half the state is experiencing “exceptional” drought, according to established categories.


Californians have been suffering the effects of drought for quite some time. Local officials are imposing restrictions on water consumption and imploring residents to conserve water in any way they can. Heck, even the Ice Bucket Challenge runs into serious problems due to the reluctance to waste water.
Below are some shocking photos that show the serious effects of the California drought.

Boats on Lake Oroville.

Lake Shasta.

Lake Shasta.

Dam on Folsom Lake.

Folsom Lake.

Lake Oroville.

A few more explanatory photographs (as well as visual comparisons with the recent past) from (it is recommended to follow the link - there are more photographs and they are of better quality).


Lake Shasta, California, USA, August 30, 2014. About 30% of the water remains. (Photo by Justin Sullivan | Getty Images)


Dry part of Lake Shasta, California, USA, August 30, 2014. Ahead is a buoy. (Photo by Justin Sullivan | Getty Images)


Lake Oroville, June 20, 2011. (Photo by Paul Hames)


And this is what the same place looked like on August 19, 2014. (Photo by Justin Sullivan | Getty Images)


Lake Oroville again, June 20, 2011. (Photo by Paul Hames)



Another site of Lake Oroville, June 20, 2011. (Photo by Paul Hames)


Same location August 19, 2014. (Photo by Justin Sullivan | Getty Images)


Lake Oroville and bridge, June 20, 2011. (Photo by Paul Hames)


And these are the consequences of the drought in California: the same place on August 19, 2014. (Photo by Justin Sullivan | Getty Images)


The spillway of the dam on Lake Oroville in California, August 19, 2014. It is dry and idle. (Photo by Justin Sullivan | Getty Images)


Lake Oroville and Ships, California, August 19, 2014. It currently has 32% water remaining. Photo by Justin Sullivan | Getty Images)

Nearby Yuba City was also completely evacuated and its streets were eerily empty. All schools were closed, many of them hastily converted into temporary shelters for refugees. Secret services even removed 500 prisoners from the Butte County Jail.

All this reminded me of the Chernobyl exclusion zone, which is still in effect in some regions of Belarus and Ukraine.

Local farms, flooded with water, also stood silent, like something out of a Hollywood zombie movie. Let's not forget that all three counties (Butte, Yuba and Sutter) where mandatory evacuations were declared are located in the agricultural region of California, which was heavily damaged by the five years and accompanying fires. Therefore, the news of a possible flood stirred up a large part of the population, who know firsthand what happens when a large amount of moisture gets into dry soil in a short period of time. Indeed, recently we ourselves have witnessed numerous landslides and sinkholes that have occurred throughout California due to the abundance of precipitation.

Further beyond Marysville is the small town of Oroville, which lies at the foot of the tallest dam in the United States. It actually looked like a ghost town from a Wild West movie: the shops were locked, all the businesses were closed without exception, the residents remove things and even furniture from their houses. The last townspeople left the deserted village in great panic.

An emergency incident with the simultaneous destruction of all spillways of a dam in Oroville, California, served as a striking example of the emergence of a large problem due to a small but systematic oversight. Destructive processes that were not identified in time by the responsible services ultimately led to a serious threat and the need for the rapid evacuation of hundreds of thousands of people, the deployment of colossal forces to eliminate the accident and the expenditure of hundreds of millions of dollars on the operation. Until the situation reached a catastrophic stage - the water did not break the dam, but it revealed the problems of the existing system for maintaining hydraulic structures, and destroyed the guarantees that a real tragedy would not occur in any region of the world.

What is a California Dam?

Oroville Dam is the highest in the United States. The height of its ground part reaches 235 meters. The dam is located on the Feather River (a tributary of the Sacramento River). A rock dam with a clay core forms the Oroville Reservoir, with a surface area of ​​10,200 square kilometers and a water volume of 4.3 cubic kilometers.

The reservoir itself is part of a complex that includes a hydroelectric power station with a capacity of 819 MW with six generators, a Hyatt power plant, a Thermalito pump-generator station, and a fish factory. The main objectives of the complex are water supply to the region, flood control and electricity generation. The facility was built in 1961–1968.

The complex's structures are located on the right side along the river. The closest object to the dam is an operational spillway (a tray made of reinforced concrete) for operation in normal water conditions. Even further to the right is an emergency discharge in case of catastrophic floods. Until the February incident, it was not used because there were no such floods. According to statistics, large-scale floods in this region can occur no more than once every ten thousand years.

The fault looks like a hundred-meter wall with a height of 10–20 meters. The incoming water must overflow without regulation, and its layer will be tens of centimeters. Further, at the junction with the right bank of the valley, there is a blind section of the dam with a height of up to 30 meters.

Chronology of the incident

Since the beginning of 2017, water levels in the Oroville Reservoir have been rising at an exponential rate. However, the record belongs to the summer of 1983, but no emergency situations were observed then. In January 2017, the amount of precipitation in the region exceeded the norm three times. Since the beginning of February, the weather has been extremely warm, even at night it did not fall below 10 degrees Celsius.

Already on February 7, a large washout was discovered in the middle part of the spillway. The karst failure, as experts from the CIS believe, occurred due to leaching of the rock base. While repairmen were inspecting the damage, water in the reservoir was rapidly accumulating. When it reached a critical point, which already threatened the safety of the dam itself, emergency crews left the failure area and directed the water through the discharge.

The consequences were not long in coming. The concrete fastening at the bottom of the structure was destroyed, after which the water began to wash away the rock underneath the drain. The destructive process began at the moment of water consumption at the level of 1.4 thousand cubic meters per second. For comparison, in 1997 the dam passed a flow of 4 thousand cubic meters per second without problems. The gap reached a size of 150 by 90 meters and a depth of 14 meters.

The engineers who identified the problem expected that the structure would collapse at any moment, so they reduced the water flow by 15%, using an emergency discharge that had not been used previously, and by February 10 it turned out that the soil foundation of the backup drain was also damaged, and the reason was the loss of integrity It was not possible to find out the object.

The flow of water carried rock fragments into the riverbed, so it was necessary to stop the operation of the hydroelectric power station, otherwise, due to backwater, it could be flooded. Meanwhile, the rupture pit on the main fault expanded, destroying its walls and eroding the adjacent slope. The situation at the emergency drainage has become critical. The decision was made to resume increased flow through the main spillway, despite the threat of loss of control of the dam due to possible failure of the flow.

Accident response and preventive measures

Since the threat of destruction of the dam infrastructure, California Governor Jerry Brown has asked President Donald Trump to send federal resources to deal with the emergency. In his address, the official noted that assistance should also be provided to the districts where residents evacuated from possible flood zones are located.

On Monday, February 13, the Governor of California declared a state of emergency in the region, covering three counties - Yuba, Sutter and Butte. State National Guard units were put on alert. The White House reported that the president has entrusted the coordination of emergency response efforts to the Federal Emergency Management Agency of the Department of Homeland Security. In addition, the country's Ministry of Defense also joined the work. Pronedra wrote earlier that Trump also declared a state of emergency in the disaster zone.

The Russian side immediately offered its help. The Center for Development of the Water Economy Complex of the Ministry of Natural Resources of the Russian Federation stated that domestic specialists can work on solving the problem of the emergency condition of the dam, including by providing appropriate scientific advice. Such tasks are not new to Russians; Moscow has already provided assistance in similar emergencies to countries in Africa and Southeast Asia.

Large forces were put on alert in the United States - a total of about 20 thousand military personnel. 125 construction crews and four dozen heavy vehicles were sent directly to the work area. Aviation was involved, including helicopters of the National Guard, with the help of which they began to drop bags of sand and rock at the sites where the drain was washed out. Barriers made of sandbags are also being erected around the dam. Every hour, about 1.2 thousand tons of rock fragments are placed in the gullies.

The state authorities informed that the work carried out by February 15 made it possible to stop the development of the catastrophic situation, and the expected storm with precipitation was not as significant as expected. In general, the cost of priority measures was estimated at $200 million. It is not yet known how the condition of the spillways will affect the further operation of the dam. Work continues. Thanks to the measures taken, the dam is already able to accommodate additional influx of water. Currently, the volume of discharge is 2.8 thousand cubic meters per second, while the rains do not stop and will continue for several more days.

According to RusHydro, measures are being taken to reduce the reservoir level by 2.5 meters per day in order to safely receive the upcoming precipitation. Debris is being removed in the riverbed to prevent possible flooding of hydroelectric power station structures. The launch of the station's capacity will make it possible to relieve some of the operational discharge. If the latter is subject to restoration, it will be repaired. If repair work is impossible, a new spillway will be built. It is possible that it is necessary to strengthen the emergency discharge slope with concrete and generally evaluate the possibility of its use in the future.

Evacuation, panic and looting

After information from the California Department of Water Resources appeared about the threat of an imminent dam failure (it later turned out that the forecasts were unjustifiably exaggerated), state authorities decided to evacuate the local population. By February 13, a total of 188 thousand people were removed or left on their own from the cities of Yuba City, Gridley, Olivehurst, Plumas Lake, Wheatland, Marysville and Live Oak. But along the route of the evacuees there were colossal traffic jams. Temporarily resettled citizens were placed in different areas at a distance of 32–120 kilometers from the possible flood zone.

Conflicting statements by officials, in particular the emergence of information about the possible destruction of the dam in a matter of hours, played a significant role in the emergence of panic. Already on February 15, the evacuated residents were told that they could return to their homes, although it was noted that the threat of flooding still remained and citizens might have to leave the dangerous area again. Citizens who returned to their homes faced the consequences of looting in their cities. Such reports also came from Oroville, where, in the absence of residents, mass thefts occurred in abandoned stores.

Forecast for the development of the situation in the near future

The state authorities initially took a pessimistic position in terms of forecasting developments. The California Department of Water Resources admitted that if the dam structure is damaged, the forecast could be unfavorable. According to local police, who interviewed experts in the field of hydraulic engineering, a hole in the spillway could threaten the integrity of the entire dam. However, experts emphasize that dams using concrete components are usually less susceptible to erosion processes.

However, if the structure is damaged, this can also lead to its collapse. The Russian Institute of Hydraulic Engineering and Energy Construction believes that the dam can survive if excess water flow is released through open gates. A disaster is potentially possible if the spillway is not functioning.

The most dire forecasts appeared on February 11, when state authorities announced that the water level in the river would rise to critical levels due to a possible dam failure. Although it was announced the next day that the threat had passed, on February 13, reports of the threat of the dam collapsing again appeared. The negative scenario provides for the speed of wave propagation in flat terrain within 25 kilometers per hour, in mountainous terrain - up to 100 kilometers per hour. It is stated that the height of the breakthrough wave for small reservoirs with a water volume of up to 50 million cubic meters will be up to one meter, but in the case of Oroville, whose capacity is eight and a half times greater, the wave will reach a height of up to nine meters.

Let us remind you that in this case, six settlements with a total population of up to 200 thousand people will be in the flood zone. In turn, RusHydro noted that as of February 12, when signs of active rock erosion were noticed on the slope below the emergency discharge, a certain threat arose for residents of the region. If the overflow wall collapsed due to intense erosion, it could cause an uncontrolled discharge of a layer of about 12 meters of the reservoir in height.

There are also alternative points of view. Forecasting for the coming days is a difficult matter, according to hydraulic engineers from the CIS, interviewed by journalists. It is more likely that the dam will remain unharmed, while the spillways - both the main and the emergency ones - will be washed out to the point of complete destruction, but no noticeable damage will be caused to the population and infrastructure. The overflow through the dam will stop after some time, or the process of erosion of the spillway will take place over a long period - within one month, which will not cause sudden changes in the situation and the problem will not become more complicated.

RusHydro believes that current data gives grounds to assert that there is no threat of destruction of the dam, but the spillway structures are in disrepair. The crest of the dam is located six meters above the emergency discharge mark, therefore an emergency overflow of water is also excluded. If the drainage erosion moves to the spillways themselves, then the latter will probably be destroyed. The pit immediately near the spillway stopped actively expanding, reaching the rocky base after the weak rocks were washed away.

Meanwhile, after the accident at one dam, other “hot spots” in California were simply forgotten. Reservoir overflow due to heavy rainfall is a problem not only at the Oroville Dam, but also at most hydraulic structures in the California Valley. The situation on the Sacramento River near the city of the same name is causing concern. The river dam is showing signs of deformation after prolonged exposure to flowing water. Some water has already leaked through the dam and entered the city park, which is located near the river. In addition, a threatening situation is observed in the area of ​​the dam on the San Joaquin River.

In addition, the water level at the Don Pedro Reservoir dam has almost reached the upper edge of the structure. If a snow storm hits the Sierra Nevada Mountains in eastern California, flooding may be inevitable. To prevent the destruction of these structures, the state authorities decided to deliberately destroy the dam on the Moklamne River, which led to the flooding of nearby agricultural land, but reduced the threat of large-scale accidents.

Possible versions of the causes of the accident

Possible problems with the dam became known long before the February accident in 2006. Even then, experts discovered minor violations of the integrity of the main spillway, but the facility was declared suitable for operation. Major repair work on the dam has not been carried out for half a century - from the day it was put into operation. For the last decade, the dam has been operating under a temporary license. Probably, the reason for the uncertain status of the dam is associated with the attempt to obtain a permit for a period of 50 years by the Californian authorities and the subsequent reaction of social activists.

In 2005, a group of activists representing environmental organizations - the South Yuba Citizens League, Sierra Club and Friends of the River - demanded that officials reinforce the emergency discharge with concrete instead of an earthen foundation. The joint letter from the organizations argued that during winter rains, water would begin to overflow the main spillway, which would ultimately lead to erosion, further structural damage and flooding. Proposals were submitted to the Presidential Administration and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, but they, based on the findings of the California Department of Water Resources that such work was inappropriate, rejected the initiative. According to the authors of the letter, the authorities simply decided to save money, since strengthening the emergency spillway with concrete would have cost millions of dollars. Now the department says the cause of erosion on the drainage drains is unknown.

Like any serious threat, the situation with the risk of dam collapse has already become overgrown with rumors and exotic theories. In particular, it is assumed that a possible disaster was deliberately provoked in order to smooth out the discontent of the population of California, the majority of whom voted for Hillary Clinton in the presidential election. A great misfortune can unite a nation and eliminate political differences. In addition, it should be taken into account that California social activists are actively calling for the separation of the region from the United States.

Proponents of the conspiracy theory believe that the failure of the main spillway was controlled and was the result of sabotage - the leak arose by interfering with the work of the already worn-out infrastructure. In addition, there were statements that rescue services carried out exercises several years ago, during which they practiced actions in the event of a dam collapse. Moreover, the almost exact date of the possible event was already specified in the maneuver scenario.

If we talk about real facts, then RusHydro, which analyzed the development of the emergency situation and possible preconditions, came to a number of conclusions. It is noted that the destruction of the operational spillway occurred suddenly, and the water flow levels were not at all maximum. Thus, we should talk about an insufficient degree of control over the condition of the hydraulic structure, which did not allow timely detection of damage, the company noted.

It is difficult to call the design solution itself correct, associated with the discharge of water masses onto an ordinary unequipped slope. Spillways must undergo mandatory testing. However, it must also be noted that the safety margin of the dam turned out to be sufficient, despite the fact that accidents occurred at both spillways. Thus, large hydraulic structures can generally be considered reliable structures, the company noted.

Regardless of what the results of the accident investigation turn out to be, it is obvious even to non-specialists that, if we do not take into account dubious theories of sabotage or sabotage, the unsatisfactory condition of both spillways was most likely the result of ordinary negligence of the services, which did not timely track the process of structural damage due to natural wear processes. The lack of preventive measures almost caused a large-scale tragedy, and for the happy outcome of the situation we can only thank the reliability of the dam itself, which acted as insurance against the negligence of industry services.

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Oroville

Live broadcasts from Oroville webcams in real time. Popular webcams are shown first. Oroville is a city and the county seat of Butte County, California, United States. Oroville was founded as a navigation point on the Feather River for gold during the California Gold Rush. The settlement was originally named Ophir City. The name was changed to Oroville in 1854 when the first post office was established there.

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