Well,
it’s a long story but worth re-telling in the light of subsequent developments
– or rather, the lack of them!
In
the late 1960s-early 1970s the major story was that the world’s reserves of
fossil fuels, especially oil were almost exhausted. From time to time, graphs and statistics were
produced to prove how few years were left before imminent disaster. Unsurprisingly the OPEC countries hurriedly
quadrupled their prices leading to a world economic slump. Remember Britain’s four-day week?
Ironically,
thirty five years later, energy reserves and the control of them now and into
the future continues to dominate the political landscape. It is conservatively estimated that Iraq and Iran have exploited only one tenth
of their oil potential. What else did
you fancy that war was being waged over? Russia’s enormous
energy reserves are currently being used as a political weapon against former
allies such as Ukraine,
which wants to express its independence. China
is just entering the economic race and will definitely consume more energy in
the next decade than it did in the previous half-century. The real dilemma is whether runaway global
warming – the direct result of the burning of fossil fuels – will bring
irreversible climate change in our own lifetimes. Certainly this is what we bequeath to our
children.
Still
what has all this got to do with the Ballinalack Tunnel?
Remember
Economy Seven Electricity? The
only fruitful way we know to store electricity is using batteries – and that
only at the low level of specific and directed personal consumption. At the National Grid level, electricity must
be consumed as it is generated. But
there are seven hours – between midnight and breakfast – when the demand is very
low. If we can use power then, and
slowly release it usefully over the following seventeen hours, then we make
more efficient use of our limited resources.
Some
of us fell for the argument and installed those brick-filled heaters in our
homes. There were problems of controlled
release: you couldn’t get heat when you most needed it. Then the oil giants cut their prices again to
successfully compete.
At
the National Grid level, the theory was that in hydro-electric schemes in
suitable areas, water could be pumped to a high-level reserve dam at night,
when cheap electricity could fuel the pumps, and the same water released during
the day could generate more electricity when it was most needed. It was a good example of ‘greener’ energy and
far-sighted planning. It failed at
Camlough. Excavation ended in 1971. Why?
Certainly
at the time the authorities put the blame on local farmers who demanded
unrealistic prices for unproductive lands that had to be acquired by NIE. Whether or not there were other factors –
and such a scheme was always going to be peripheral to consumer needs - it is
evident that originally a great deal of money and effort had been invested in
the project before it was abandoned.
The
main tunnel – of bore large enough to accommodate articulated trucks! – is some
891 metres in length, with at least one side tunnel. It runs westwards under the Ballinalack Road
and falls at a gently gradient of 1:13. At
its end there is a wide water catchment area, the ‘tank’ from which water would
be pumped to the artificial dam created on the upper slopes of Camlough Mountain.
Our
‘Troubles’ had scarcely begun, and certainly South Armagh
was politically quiet when the project was finally abandoned. In the light of developments in the immediate
aftermath, it is scarcely surprising that the project was never revived. Ironically much land was seized without
compensation by the British Army in the following decades and a lot of the rest
lay fallow ever since. On the other
hand, a plot of building land could not be got now for love or money in that
same area!
Hydro-Electric
Power schemes work best where rainwater in rivers flowing from higher ground is
channelled to drive turbines. Gravity
makes it fall and no power has to be expended to raise it first to the higher
level. There are many cheaper and
preferable schemes today – wind, wave, tidal power and solar panels to name but
a few. It is highly unlikely that the
Camlough Hydro-Electric Scheme will ever be revived.
Does
any one know what, if anything is presently stored in that huge tunnel, and who
has ownership of it? If so, please email
us with the information.
The
only good that came out of it all was when the Geology Department of Queens
University was called in to do a geological survey of the excavated site. Their Report is available in Newry Library.
Ironically
the Geology Department there too has been scrapped!