Cheakamus system
What's new
August 2024
Starting on or after August 15, we will be reducing flows from Daisy Lake Dam to the Cheakamus River. This is part of our standard Daisy Lake Dam operations for August, to ensure we have enough water to meet our Water Use Plan (WUP) minimum flow requirements through the rest of the summer and early fall and reduce the risk of stranding spawning salmon later in the year.
The Water Use Plan allows us to reduce flow from the Daisy Lake Dam to the Cheakamus River on or after August 15. Our rampdown timeline has taken into account the current conditions in addition to operating constraints.
Once initiated, the rampdown will take place over a period of up to 10 days. Water levels will be reduced at a slow rate over a long period to help protect fish in the river at this time of year.
Pink Salmon, which spawn only every other year, are not spawning in the Cheakamus River this year. Fish monitoring crews will be on hand, focusing on protecting juvenile salmon before the rampdown and as it progresses.
This work has been in collaboration with Squamish Nation and our key stakeholders as our operations team continues to work within this dynamic river system.
Construction notice
Roe Creek Stilling Basin dredging: Brief delays on Sea to Sky Trail
Routine maintenance involving dredging at the Roe Creek Sediment Basin, 35 km north of Squamish, will take place from August 12 to September 9., Monday to Saturday, 7 AM – 6 PM. The Sea to Sky Trail will remain open, but expect brief delays near Roe Creek due to trucks crossing the trail. Please follow on-site traffic instructions. View construction notice [PDF, 689 KB].
Daisy Lake Dam impounds water flowing south from the headwaters of the Cheakamus River in Daisy Lake Reservoir for diversion through a tunnel that runs through Cloudburst Mountain to the Cheakamus Generating Station on the Squamish River. Water is released from the dam down a 26 kilometre stretch of Cheakamus River to its confluence with the Squamish River.
BC Hydro works to upgrade and maintain existing assets like the facilities in the Cheakamus system so that our customers continue to receive reliable and clean electricity. There are currently a number of projects in the system including:
- Penstock Recoating
- Replacement of Turbine Inlet Valves
- Units 1&2 Generator Replacement
- Instrumentation Upgrade
We’re undertaking a Water Use Plan (WUP) Order Review as the final step in implementing B.C.’s Water Use Plan Guidelines. The WUP Order Review is intended to determine whether the ordered water management constraints on our operations are achieving the specific environmental and social objectives identified in each facility’s WUP Order, and recommend how the Order may be modified or sustained for future operations.
- Information on the Cheakamus WUPOR, the WUP, terms of reference for the monitoring studies and annual reports
- The Cheakamus Monitoring Program Synthesis Report [PDF, 4.4 MB] provides a summary of the studies undertaken for each Order
BC Hydro developed Water Use Plans (WUPs) for most of our hydroelectric generation facilities between 1999 and 2004. The goal of water use planning was to find a better balance between competing uses of water which are environmentally, socially, and economically acceptable to British Columbians. WUPs were developed through a consultative planning process involving government agencies, First Nations, local citizens, and other affected groups. WUPs were implemented by a Water Act Order issued by the B.C. Comptroller of Water Rights (CWR).
Following observations of higher than anticipated numbers of stranded juvenile salmon in August 2018, BC Hydro committed to implementing the Cheakamus Adaptive Stranding Protocol (CASP) to study the effects of flow reductions on the Cheakamus River, and implement recommendations to mitigate impacts.
The study's objectives include:
- to better understand the risk of fish stranding on the Lower Cheakamus River,
- to test the effectiveness of different mitigation measures during those types of operations that may strand fish, and
- to identify effective fish stranding mitigation options for consideration for long-term implementation.
Since the implementation of the CASP in fall 2018, BC Hydro has deployed fish monitoring crews on the Cheakamus River during planned flow reductions.
Read the CASP Year 1 Study [PDF, 4.3 MB].
Read the interim report
The FWCP is a partnership between BC Hydro, the Province of B.C., Fisheries and Oceans Canada, First Nations, and public stakeholders to conserve and enhance fish and wildlife impacted by the footprint of existing BC Hydro dams.
Since 1999 more than $3M has been spent on 41 projects in the Cheakamus River Watershed. This includes 30 projects related to fish.
Additional information about the FWCP
The FWCP is funded by BC Hydro and compensates for the historical impacts to fish, wildlife and their supporting habitats affected by generation facilities. In the past 5 years, the program has invested $1.1M in habitat-enhancing projects in the Cheakamus River Watershed.
Contact us
If you'd like to learn more about the project, please contact us at:
Email: projects@bchydro.com
Phone: 604 623 4472
Toll free: 1 866 647 3334