A review of spillway flood design standards in European countries, including freeboard margins and prior reservoir level
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Published:1992
F. M. Law, 1992. "A review of spillway flood design standards in European countries, including freeboard margins and prior reservoir level", Water resources and reservoir engineering: Proceedings of the seventh conference of the British Dam Society held at the University of Stirling, 24–27 June 1992, Noel M. Parr, J. Andrew Charles, Susan Walker
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As a cornerstone to its review of the ICE guide to Floods and Reservoir Safety, the Working Party has surveyed European practice. This paper summarises the outcome of a questionnaire that focussed on the key parameters of Table 1 in that guide. Standards continually evolve as they adjust to operational experience and incidents inside and outside any one country. Given the varied number, type and mean age of dams coming under any single legislation, it is not surprising to find that coverage differs. There is no reason to think that UK guidelines need change fundamentally unless and until joint probability research into the relationship between the key parameters warrants it. However overseas experience of ice sheets, log jams and similar rare events needs to be drawn upon more widely in the United Kingdom. The concept of a Probable Maximum Flood has only limited acceptance in much of Europe but so has hazard categorisation.
APPROACH
LEGISLATION OR GUIDELINES ON RESERVOIR FLOOD SAFETY STANDARDS
SPILLWAY DESIGN FLOOD RARITY
PROBABLE MAXIMUM PRECIPITATION
FREEBOARD
PRIOR RESERVOIR LEVEL
GATED SPILLWAYS
BOTTOM OUTLET USE DURING FLOODS
DISCUSSION
CONCLUSIONS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
REFERENCES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
