The Snowy 2.0 pumped-hydro megaproject has marked a significant milestone. One of three tunnel boring machines (TBM), Lady Eileen Hudson, is now two-thirds of the way through its second tunnel excavation.
The TBM is approximately four kilometres into the six-kilometre ‘tailrace’ tunnel, which will link the lower Talbingo Reservoir with the massive 20-storey underground power station. TBM Lady Eileen Hudson previously completed a 2.85-kilometre main access tunnel, which construction teams are now using to reach the underground power station site.
Drill and blast works are also advancing at the Talbingo water intake, creating a 700-metre tunnel between the intake structure and the tailrace tunnel. The Talbingo intake is located in very steep terrain, and after 570,000 cubic metres of material was excavated over two years, the rock face is now 110 metres high.
Snowy Hydro CEO Dennis Barnes said that recent months have been some of the project’s most productive.
“Overall, the project is around 60 per cent complete, and there’s a strong sense of momentum, with good tunnelling progress by TBM Lady Eileen and the other two TBMs performing well,” Mr Barnes said.
“Snowy 2.0 is one of the most complex and challenging megaprojects underway in the world. There is an immense sense of pride in what’s being achieved across the workforce of more than 3,000 people.”
Mr Barnes said Snowy 2.0 will be the most significant addition to the National Electricity Market (NEM) since the original Snowy Scheme.
“Snowy 2.0 will have a generating capacity of 2,200 megawatts and an unmatched 160-hour storage capability, meaning it will be able to power around 3 million homes for a week,” Mr Barnes said.
“While batteries and gas are important to store the excess energy from the increasing amounts of wind and solar in the grid, only pumped hydro can offer the long-duration storage needed to keep the lights on and smooth energy price peaks during extended periods without enough sun and wind.”
Snowy 2.0 is on track to be delivered within the $12 billion budget and be complete by the end of 2028.
Across the project, more progress is being made:
The caverns in the underground power station complex are more than 27 per cent excavated.
All 196 of the very large brackets holding the temporary construction cranes for the underground power station have been installed in the two power station caverns. When fully excavated, the Snowy 2.0 power station will be the equivalent of a 20-storey, 250-metre-long building located 800 metres underground.
At Marica, the 28-metre wide surge shaft is excavated to 123 metres or half of its final depth. The shaft will provide water storage when the power station starts up and pressure relief in the headrace tunnel when it shuts down.
TBM Florence is progressing well, excavating the 17-kilometre long ‘headrace’ tunnel that will link the upper Tantangara water reservoir to the underground power station, with more than 1,600 metres excavated. TBM Kirsten is performing to plan and is now excavating the 1.6-kilometre, very steep tunnel that will link the headrace tunnel to the underground power station. Ground conditions ahead of all TBMs are expected to be inconsistent, and the performance of the machines will vary.
The NSW Department of Planning, Infrastructure and Housing is currently assessing the planning modification to enable a fourth project, TBM, which is required to tunnel through a challenging geological fault zone.
Snowy 2.0 is focused on health and safety above all else. While health and safety performance is encouraging, it is an area in which the project is continually monitoring and looking to improve further:
The project’s current total reportable injury frequency rate (TRIFR) is 2.42*. *Calculated per million hours worked. Current total work hours are 27.8 million. The current lost time injury frequency rate (LTIFR) is 0.92.
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