I very much doubt that there was a failure to shut down the station for commerical reasons. Hydro power stations can be started and stopped very quickly at minimal cost, this one in particular is designed to run forward as a generating unit during the day and backwards as a pump storage unit during the night so in my opinion this poor sole wasn't trapped by something connected to the operation of the turbines themselves.
Dave
PS Sorry I cannot post the link to details about the station but google "Purulia power project"
I very much doubt that there was a failure to shut down the station for commerical reasons. Hydro power stations can be started and stopped very quickly at minimal cost, this one in particular is designed to run forward as a generating unit during the day and backwards as a pump storage unit during the night so in my opinion this poor sole wasn't trapped by something connected to the operation of the turbines themselves.
Dave
PS Sorry I cannot post the link to details about the station but google "Purulia power project"
Wait, the kinetic energy of the water flowing downwards through the dam always flows in one direction. At off-peak hours, some of the power that is generated by the kinetic energy of the flowing water through the turbine(s) is routed through wires to pumps that pump water from a lower reservoir back to the higher elevation reservoir to be stored back again as potential energy which in turn quickly becomes kinetic energy as the water flows back through the dam. The pumping is through a totally seperate pipe or set of pipes that the inlet tunnels for the turrbines.
Previous news reports indicated that the leak was affecting the efficiency and amount of power generation. This indicates that his foot was stuck in something that affected power generation.
Right or wrong (and I could be wrong), I assume that power plants such as Parulia simply cannot shut down. There is usually power supply contractual obligations that must be met by Parulia or heavy fines are levied against the Parulia power project. This power generation dam / project has 4 units (turbines), and I assume that one unit (if not 2 or 3) is always operating while one to three (the second third and/or fourth) is undergoing maintenance or is shut down during offpeak demand hours. However, at least one unit is usually always running. Complete shutdown of the power generation is usually not an option.
The pumped water flows in one direction through seprate pipes thatn the intake pipes or tunnels that flow water through the turbines.