Milltown Dam (St. Croix River)

Coordinates: 45°10′33″N 67°17′34″W / 45.1759°N 67.2929°W / 45.1759; -67.2929
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Milltown Dam
Milltown Dam before removal, 2019
Official nameMilltown Generating Station
La centrale de Milltown (French)
CountryCanada
United States
LocationSt. Stephen, New Brunswick
Calais, Maine
Coordinates45°10′33″N 67°17′34″W / 45.1759°N 67.2929°W / 45.1759; -67.2929
StatusDecommissioned
Opening date1881 (1881)
Demolition date2023 (2023)
Owner(s)NB Power
Dam and spillways
ImpoundsSt. Croix River
Height (foundation)13 metres (43 ft)
Height (thalweg)20 metres (66 ft)
Length183 metres (600 ft)

The Milltown Dam (French: Barrage de Milltown) was a hydroelectric dam on the St. Croix River between St. Stephen, New Brunswick, Canada and Calais, Maine, United States. The dam was operated by NB Power from 1881 to 2023.

History[edit]

Construction and energy output[edit]

Built in 1881 and modernized in the early 1900s, the Milltown Dam was the oldest hydroelectric dam in Canada before its decommissioning. It was also the first hydroelectric facility built by the New Brunswick Electric Power Corporation.[1] The power house had a capacity of 4 megawatts with 7 turbines.[2]

Before its decommissioning in 2023, the Milltown Dam accounted for 0.8% of NB Power's total hydroelectricity output. Electricity generated by the Milltown Dam was also exported to the United States, connected to a 69,000-volt transmission circuit owned by the Eastern Maine Electric Cooperative, an electric utility serving Calais.[3]

Removal[edit]

In 2019, NB Power announced its plans to decommission and remove the Milltown Dam, citing the dam's high maintenance cost and low energy output.[4] Although NB Power considered refurbishing the dam, the estimated cost was above $60 million, while the cost of removal would be around $20 million.[5] After receiving approval from the Department of Environment and Local Government, the United States Army Corps of Engineers, and the Maine Department of Environmental Protection in 2022, the decommissioning of the dam began on July 1, 2023.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ NB Power: Hydro Tour Archived 2014-10-12 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "NB Power System Map". Archived from the original on 2014-10-12. Retrieved 2014-10-07.
  3. ^ US Department of Energy: "PP-32 Eastern Maine Electric Cooperative Inc", February 5, 1959.
  4. ^ "Milltown Dam removal between New Brunswick and Maine hits demolition benchmark". CTVNews. 2023-10-30. Retrieved 2024-02-25.
  5. ^ sidesea (2021-10-03). "ASF - Milltown Generating Station ought to be removed". ASF. Retrieved 2024-02-25.
  6. ^ NBPower. "Milltown Decommissioning". www.nbpower.com. Retrieved 2024-02-25.

External links[edit]