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<br />I <br /> <br />Power Operations (Cont.) <br /> <br />Lower Basin <br /> <br />Water Year 1993 <br /> <br />On June 1, 1987, the United States assumed operation and <br />maintenance responsibility of Hoover Powerplant and <br />associated switching stations, after the SO-year contract with <br />operating agents (The City of Los Angeles and its <br />Department of Water and Power, and Southern California <br />Edison Company, Ud.) expired. The 'General Regulations <br />for Generation and Sale of Power in Accordance with the <br />Boulder Canyon Project Adjustment Act', promulgated on <br />May 20,1941, provided the basis for computation of charges <br />for electrical energy generated at Hoover Dam through May <br />31, 1987. The Department of Energy Organizational Act of <br />1977 transferred the responsibility for the power marketing <br />and transmission functions of the Boulder Canyon Project <br />from the Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation) to the <br />Western Area Power Administration (Western). The power <br />marketing functions of Western include the responsibility for <br />promulgating charges for the sale of power. The <br />construction, power generation, operation, maintenance, and <br />replacement responsibilities associated with the Hoover <br />Powerplant and appurtenant. works remained with <br />Reclamation. <br /> <br />Marketing of Parker-Davis power and operating the <br />transmission system are the responsibility of Western. <br />Reclamation continues to operate and maintain the dams <br />and their powerplants, a funCtiOll of the Lower Colorado <br />Dams Project Office. <br /> <br />Davis and Parker Powerplants are now operated by <br />Reclamation's Hoover Control Center's Supervisory Control <br />and Data Acquisition (SCADA) computer system located at <br />Hoover Dam. The SCADA system monitors and remotely <br />controls the powerplant generating units to adhere to water <br />schedules provided by Reclamation's water scheduling <br />branch located at the Lower Colorado Dams Project, <br />Hoover Dam and power schedules provided from Western. <br /> <br />The net generation from Hoover powerplant during the 1993 <br />fiscal year (October 1, 1992 through September 30, 1993) <br />was 3,222,153,000 kilowatt-hours. <br /> <br />The unit uprating program continued with the program <br />completed in May 1993. The total Hoover powerplant <br />capacity, at the completion of uprating, is estimated to be a <br />nameplate capacity of 2,074 megawatts. <br /> <br />Water Year 1994 <br /> <br />In operatinn studies of Lake Mead and Lake Powell for the <br />operation year which ends September 30, 1994, the amounts <br />released at Hoover Dam have been projected to.satisfy both <br />downstream water requirements, including diversions by the <br />Metropolitan Water District and tbe .Central Arizona <br />Project, while also complying with the overall requirements <br />to meet Compact, flood control, fIrm power contracts, and <br />operating criteria releases provisions. The estimated <br />monthly Hoover releases during water year 1994 total 10.5 <br />billion cubic meters (8.52 million acre-feet). It is estimated <br />that generation from these Hoover releases will result in <br />delivery to the approved contractors of approximately 3.9 <br />billion kilowatt-hours of electrical energy. Normal routine <br />maintenance at Hoover has resumed with the completion of <br />the uprating program. The four main penstocks are <br />scheduled for inspection and repair over the next 4 year at <br />Hoover. <br /> <br />26 <br />