Clarrie Hall Dam
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Clarrie Hall Dam is a minor ungated concrete faced rockfill
embankment Embankment may refer to: Geology and geography * A levee, an artificial bank raised above the immediately surrounding land to redirect or prevent flooding by a river, lake or sea * Embankment (earthworks), a raised bank to carry a road, railwa ...
dam with an uncontrolled concrete-lined chute spillway across the Doon Doon Creek, located upstream of the small town of
Uki Uki or UKI may refer to: *Uki Goñi, writer, journalist and musician *Uki, New South Wales, an Australian town *Uki, Kumamoto, a Japanese city *Uki Island in Solomon Islands * ''Uki'' (TV series), a pre-school animated television programme from Bel ...
, in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales,
Australia Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a Sovereign state, sovereign country comprising the mainland of the Australia (continent), Australian continent, the island of Tasmania, and numerous List of islands of Australia, sma ...
. The main purpose of the dam is for water supply and it creates the artificial Lake Clarrie Hall.


Location and features

Clarrie Hall dam construction commenced in 1979 and it was opened in 1983 with the unique distinction of being full after heavy rainfall prior to the opening ceremony. It is a minor dam on the Doon Doon Creek, a tributary of the Tweed River, and is located approximately south-west of Murwillumbah. The primary function of the dam is to provide storage of water for Tweed Shire's drinking water supply, by releasing water downstream into Doon Doon Creek when levels of freshwater in the Tweed River fall below 95%, which occurs mostly in winter and spring. Otherwise the natural flows of the Tweed River provide 80% of the water needs of the Shire. The dam wall height is and is long. The maximum water depth is and at 100% capacity the dam wall holds back of water at AHD. The surface area of Lake Clarrie Hall is and the catchment area is . The uncontrolled chute spillway is capable of discharging . The estimated completion cost was A$34 million. In April 2013, an upgrade of Clarrie Hall Dam commenced, and included widening the existing spillway crest to and raising the existing spillway inlet walls and embankment parapet wall by . It is expected that the upgrade will be completed during 2014. Following heavy rainfall in the catchment area, in January 2012 the dam was at its highest level since records commenced in 1986. It was estimated that water was flowing in the range of over the dam spillway.


Recreation

Lake Clarrie Hall provides valuable public recreation including swimming, sailing, boating and freshwater fishing, including sports fishing for Australian bass. Boat access for electric outboard and paddle-powered craft is available at Crams Farm, at the southern end of the waterbody. Lake Clarrie Hall has been stocked with more than Australian bass fingerlings over the past 10 years. A fishing licence is required to fish in the lake. High levels of blue-green algae are common on the lake surface.


Proposed raising of the dam wall

In December 2015, Approval was given by Tweed Shire Council to raise the dam wall by 8.5 metres, doubling its footprint and trebling its capacity. An ''
environmental impact assessment Environmental Impact assessment (EIA) is the assessment of the environmental consequences of a plan, policy, program, or actual projects prior to the decision to move forward with the proposed action. In this context, the term "environmental imp ...
'' is due to be completed in February 2021, and construction is not expected to begin until December 2023. 12 of 16 properties or part properties had already been purchased for the purpose of the project as of December 2020.


Ecological impact

According to the council's ''Flora and Fauna Survey and Preliminary Environmental Impact Assessment,'' 119.66 of the 223.10 hectares due to be inundated is dominated by native vegetation. Rainforest of high conservation value and nine threatened plant species (of which two prefer the area to be inundated) were found in the area to be affected. Just under half of the native bushland to be inundated is designated key fauna habitat. 25 threatened animal species were discovered and seven of them depend on the tree hollows which were also found in the area due to be inundated.


Cultural heritage and inundation of archaeological sites

Raising the dam wall could affect 81 sites – including campsites, rock shelters, stone artifacts, knapping resources, grinding grooves sites and a possible Aboriginal scarred tree – identified in an ''Archaeological Assessment and Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Assessment'' conducted for the council.


See also

* List of reservoirs and dams in Australia *
Uki, New South Wales Uki ( ) is a village situated near Mount Warning in the Tweed Valley of far northern New South Wales, Australia in the Tweed Shire. At the , Uki had a population of 765 people. Its name may have come from an aboriginal word for "small water pla ...
* Environmental impact of reservoirs * Integrated water resources management * Mount Jerusalem National Park * Tweed River (New South Wales)


References


External links

* * {{WaterNSW , state=autocollapse Dams completed in 1982 Dams in New South Wales Embankment dams 1982 establishments in Australia Northern Rivers Tweed Shire