Ibi District ( 揖斐郡 , Ibi-gun ) is a district located in Gifu Prefecture , Japan. As of July 2011, the district has an estimated population of 72,109. The total area is 876.65 km.
8-576: The area of the former village of Tokuyama in this district will be flooded by the Tokuyama Dam . 35°33′11″N 136°28′37″E / 35.553°N 136.477°E / 35.553; 136.477 This Gifu Prefecture location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Tokuyama Dam The Tokuyama Dam ( 徳山ダム , Tokuyama damu ) is an embankment dam near Ibigawa , Ibi District , Gifu Prefecture in Japan . The dam
16-485: A 660,000,000 m (2.3 × 10 cu ft) capacity, surface area of 13 km (5.0 sq mi) and catchment area of 254.5 km (98.3 sq mi). The dam will support two Francis turbine - generators , one with a 130 MW capacity which will be located in an underground power station downstream. The second is an operational 23 MW generator and is located at the base of the dam. The installed capacity of both will be 153 MW. The power station will process
24-609: The country's largest reservoir by volume as well. In December 1957, Electric Power Development Company (J-Power) selected the Ibi River for study at the 23rd Electric Power Development Coordinating Meeting. By May 1976, the Ministry of Construction released their bulletin "Policy on Tokuyama Dam Construction Project". In December 1982, the project was incorporated into the Electric Power Development Basic Plan. It
32-582: The dam was laid at a pace of 6,200,000 m (220,000,000 cu ft) per year, enabling the dam to be constructed in 26 months. Sediment from the Yokoyama Dam 's reservoir was used as fill as well. In September 2006 initial filling of the reservoir behind the Tokuyama Dam began and by June 2008, the dam was complete. Filling was complete in September. In October of the same year, J-Power passed oversight of
40-520: The design of the project due to the concerns and protests of locals and groups. Instead of the pumped-storage hydroelectric scheme, only the Tokuyama Dam was to be constructed with a 153-MW conventional power station. Subsequently, the Sugihara Dam and Sugihara Power Plant were scrapped from the project. During construction, the 503 m (1,650 ft) long Tokunoyama Hattoku Bridge was constructed upstream. With improved techniques and equipment, fill for
48-411: The power station construction to Chubu. The first generator, Unit 1, was commissioned on 15 May 2014. Unit 2 should be commissioned by June 2015. The Tokuyama Dam is a 427.1 m (1,401 ft) long and 161 m (528 ft) high rock-fill embankment dam with a clay core. The total structural volume of the dam is 13,700,000 m (480,000,000 cu ft). The dam creates a reservoir with
56-483: Was approved by the government in 1998. The original project was a pumped-storage hydroelectric scheme which consisted of the Tokuyama Dam as the upper reservoir , the Sugihara Dam as the lower and the 400 MW Sugihara Power Plant. The dam is named after the village that was flooded by the construction of the dam. Construction on the dam started in May 2000 but by May 2004 J-Power and Chubu Electric announced they had changed
64-502: Was completed in 2008 and will support a 153 MW hydroelectric power station that is expected to be fully operational in 2015. Unit 1 at 23 MW was commissioned in May 2014. The dam was originally intended to withhold the upper reservoir of a 400 MW pumped-storage power station until a design change in 2004. The dam is also intended for flood control and water supply . It is the largest dam by structural volume in Japan and withholds
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