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BC Hydro Power Systems
The Pemberton area is home to two significant BC Hydro power system projects.
Rutherford Creek Power Project
Just 10 kilometres
southwest of Pemberton on the west side of Highway 99, lies the
50-megawatt Rutherford Creek Power Project, which began producing
electricity in May 2004.
The project took less than two years to build and was developed
under a negotiated Participation Agreement. The Mount Currie First
Nation, which accounted for roughly 15% of the workforce, will
share in benefits related to operations and its profits.
Rutherford Creek is comprised of a diversion weir on the creek,
which draws the water through the penstock, dropping the water 370
metres to the powerhouse below, to two 25-megawatt turbine
generators.
Miller Creek Hydro Project
High in the Coast Mountains lays the source of
Miller Creek's abundant water supply, the Ipsoot Glacier. Another
run-of-river project nestled in the Sea to Sky Corridor, the Miller
Creek hydro project, on a tributary of the Lillooet River, lies
four kilometres north of Pemberton and produces 29 megawatts (MW)
of power.
The facility includes water intakes on North and South Miller Creek
at elevations of 1,100 metres and 1,200 metres. The water then
travels through a 4.2-kilometre steel pressure pipeline linking to
a 33- megawatt power station in the lower reach of the creek.
Behind the three-metre high concrete dam and steel water-release
gate is a two-hectare pond reservoir.
Future planned development on several rivers is in the
environmental stages.



