Tumut
3 Power Station Opened 23
October 1972 The Canberra Times |
Last
Snowy Project The Governor-General, Sir Paul Hasluck, opened the Tumut 3 power station, near Talbingo,
on Saturday, 23 years after the Snowy Mountains hydro-electric
scheme was opened officially. The scheme was opened officially
on October 17, 1949, by the then Governor-General, Sir William McKell, who was present on Saturday. Also present was the first Commissioner
of the Snowy Mountains Hydro-electric Authority, Sir William Hudson. The Tumut 3 project, scheduled
for completion late next year or early 1974, cost $170 million. It comprises the first pump
storage scheme in the southern hemisphere and is the largest and most
complex project as well as the last, of the Snowy scheme. The scheme has involved the
construction of 16 large dams and some smaller ones, more than 90
miles of tunnels, seven power stations, a pumping station, and
about 50 miles of aqueducts, at a total cost of about $800 million. The Minister for National Development,
Sir Reginald Swartz, said at Saturday's ceremony that two
predominant aspects of the scheme were that it had been completed within
its original time estimate, projected more than 20 years ago, and that
it had been constructed within the costs estimated at that time. About 1,500 guests watched Sir
Paul close a switch which caused water from the Talbingo reservoir
to flow down the high-pressure pipeline to the station, starting No
1 generator. "Here in the Snowy Mountains
workers have built a great monument to themselves and their industry",
Sir Paul said. It was a truly national project which had been described
as one of the world's great engineering achievements. "The Snowy scheme stands as
a monument to the foresight of those who conceived the scheme and those
who made the political decisions and provided the funds for it, and to
the fortitude, dedication and skill of those who executed the
work and turned plans and decisions into facts", he said. Sir Reginald Swartz said there
would be few engineering concepts to compare with the scheme in terms of
difficulties of terrain and climate, in size and complexity, and in the challenge
to designer and worker. "The Snowy scheme not only
has captured the imagination of the engineering world, it is in itself a
thing of functional beauty on the rooftop of our country", he
said. It was an excellent example of the
ability of the Commonwealth and the States to "get together on
projects of mutual interest, in the water resources development
field". Staff employed by the Authority
reached a peak of 7,300 in 1959. Most of the present workforce
will be involved, after the completion of this last project, in the
operation and maintenance of the works on behalf of the Snowy Mountains
Council. |