Volume 2 Issue 6 June 2021

Efficiency and Environmental Friendliness By Kris Polly One stereotype about hydropower holds that it deals with nothing more than massive, river-spanning dams with detrimental environmental effects. While large dams are certainly important (e.g., they protect downstream populations from floods), hydropower in the 21st century is making advances in efficiency and environmental friendliness in many fields. […]

Justin Wright-Eakes: Funding Innovation in the Water Industry at Oval Park Capital

History is full of stories of innovators with groundbreaking or brilliant ideas, but in need of an initial investment to get their ideas off the ground. That is where venture capital firms like Oval Park Capital come into play. Since its founding, Oval Park Capital has focused on innovative and novel technologies that can make […]

Niagara Parks Power Station: From Historic Plant to Tourist Attraction

Hydropower was one of the forces that fueled the Industrial Revolution in the 19th and 20th centuries, and advancements made during that time still shape the world we live in today. It is therefore crucial to preserve the history of that period as well as the hydro plants that made it possible. Niagara Parks is […]

Juliann Blanford of NuSTREEM: Increasing the Efficiency of Hydro’s Installed Baseload

How NuSTREEM’s NuTECH Controller Is Making Intelligent Decisions to Run Your Hydro Site NuSTREEM is a pioneering hydroelectric equipment manufacturer based in Mansfield, Connecticut. Its original founder recognized that future growth in the U.S. small hydropower sector would rely on modern, modular, and intelligent generation equipment and innovative deployment platforms. Building on that insight, NuSTREEM […]

Volume 2 Issue 5 May 2021

The Multidisciplinarity of Hydropower By Kris Polly Hydropower is multidisciplinary by nature: It involves civil and electrical engineering, turbine design, and hydrology, but it also touches many fields of law, including environmental and endangered species law, historical preservation regulations, natural resources law, and administrative law. All that means that hydro law is no simple field. […]

Restoring Utah’s Historic Olmsted Power Plant

Over the last 7 years, the Central Utah Water Conservancy District (CUWCD) has replaced the historic Olmsted power plant and transformed the century-old original building into a heritage feature. The early-priority-date water right associated with the full capacity of the original plant means that its continued operation is critical to the CUWCD’s continued ability to […]

Building a Hydropower Engineering Master’s Program at the University of Toronto

Hydropower engineering is a specialized and highly multidisciplinary field, but perhaps because of the long-established nature of hydropower as a technology, there are now few university programs dedicated specifically to it. Bryan Karney, a professor at the University of Toronto (U of T), Sharon Mandair, the program coordinator for waterpower at the U of T, […]

Restoring the Thermalito Pumping- Generating Plant After a Catastrophic Fire

California’s Department of Water Resources (DWR) is charged with overseeing the State Water Project (SWP) through the constructing, operating, maintaining, and ensuring the safety and efficiency of the SWP’s dams and hydropower infrastructure. The SWP provides water and power to millions of Californians and their homes, farms, and businesses. This charge was tested in 2012, […]

Chuck Sensiba on Troutman Pepper’s Expertise in Hydro Law

The law firm Troutman Pepper has the largest hydropower practice in the country in terms of professionals who devote all or a substantial part of their law practice to hydropower matters. Dating to its earliest beginnings over 100 years ago, the firm has been deeply involved in energy and natural resources issues on behalf of […]