Background In the early 1940s various schemes were proposed for electricity development across Scotland and the nationalised
North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board was established in 1943 to undertake some of them. The schemes, including the then named Tummel-Garry Scheme, were not universally welcomed. At the time the Tummel-Garry scheme was introduced, only 1 in 6 farms and 1 in 200
crofts in Perthshire had electric power. The concerted opposition to the Board's plans resulted in the resignation of the first chair of the board Lord Airlie, and
Tom Johnston was appointed to run the board in 1946. His tenure lasted until 1959 and he successfully completed many projects by pushing an agenda of social change through development. There had been concerted opposition to the Board's first scheme, that at
Loch Sloy, but when the Tummel Garry scheme was published as the second scheme to be implemented, the Secretary of State, Tom Johnston received 25 objections. Johnston therefore set up a tribunal to consider the application, overseen by John Cameron, Sir Robert Bryce Walker and Major G H M Brown Lindsay. The hearing lasted for ten days, and the transcripts ran to 1,188 pages. Opposition was spearheaded by Perthshire County Council, a number of riparian landowners and the residents of Pitlochry. There were claims that the amenity of the area would be destroyed, tourists would no longer come to the area, and that salmon fishing would no longer be possible.
Edward MacColl, the Board's Chief Executive, was unable to appear as he was ill, and
Lord Airlie was a less able witness, who had suffered months of vicious abuse in the press. However, he recovered his composure on the second day, and emphasised that the scheme would benefit much of the North of Scotland and the Islands. From day six, fishery experts, civil engineers, architects, hotel owners, youth hostelers and environmentalists argued the case for the opposition. There were calls for the Board to develop schemes elsewhere, such as
Affric, or the more remote parts of the Highlands. The allegations were acrimonious, but R P Morison, summing up for the Board at the end of the proceedings, stated that the benefits of providing electricity to remote areas where it would be uneconomic to do so without such a scheme outweighed the small amount of damage that might be done, and he was adamant that the tourists would still come to Pitlochry and that the livelihoods of the residents would be maintained. The final report, when it was published, largely agreed with this position, and recommended that the scheme should proceed. There were attempts to derail the progress of the bill in Parliament, which raised the same issues again, but the MP for Perth and Kinross, William Snadden, failed to convince the House of Commons that the confirmation order should be annulled, and Lord Kinnaird was persuaded not to bring a similar motion in the House of Lords. Edinburgh based architect
Harold Tarbolton of Tarbolton & Ochterlony was part of the NoSHEB architectural panel, along with
Reginald Fairlie and
James Shearer. The panel was responsible for much of the design of the later scheme's structures several of which are now
listed. Listings include Pitlochry which is Category A (defined as "Buildings of special architectural or historical interest which are outstanding examples of a particular period, style or building type.") and is described by
Historic Environment Scotland as "an outstanding example...a bold modernist design by Harold Tarbolton."
Sir Edward MacColl was the board's engineer having previously been responsible for other hydro schemes. The contracting engineers were
Sir Alexander Gibb and Partners and around 12,000workers were employed at the peak of construction with workers including German and Italian former
prisoners of war as well as a cohort of Donegal Tunnel Tigers,
Irish tunnelling specialists who moved from job to job. The scheme was expected to generate 635
Gigawatt-hours a year, and by 1986 it had achieved an average of 663GWh a year.
Infrastructure The first stage of the project involved the construction of the Clunie Dam at the eastern end of Loch Tummel. This raised the level of the loch by , and more than doubled its length. Two drum gates control the discharge of flood water through the dam. To allow fish to continue to reach the upper river, a fish ladder consisting of 34pools was built. The main contractor was
George Wimpey. From the dam, a long tunnel was constructed, which is horseshoe shaped in cross section, and was the largest tunnel in Britain at the time, with the same capacity as a diameter pipeline. At the eastern end it feeds three diameter steel pipelines, which each feed a 20.4 MW turbines. The water then discharges into the River Tummel, just below its junction with the River Garry. A memorial arch, with the same cross section as the tunnel, was built at the entrance to the car park, to commemorate those who died during the construction. The main contractor for the tunnel and power station was
Cementation Company. Loch Faskally was created by the construction of the Port-na-Craig Dam at Pitlochry. The water level of the loch is maintained by two automatic drum gates, and varies very little. The gates were the first time that such an arrangement had been used in Britain. The power station contains two 7.5 MW generating sets, and a pool and orifice fish ladder allows fish to reach the upper river. The generated power is carried by underground power lines to Clunie power station, so there are no overhead pylons in the area. The whole project was beset by the difficulty of obtaining the necessary supplies of aggregate, sand, cement and heavy plant. Obtaining workers was worse, and a general shortage of labour continued through 1946, 1947 and early 1948. The Board expected the power stations to be operational by late 1947, but delays resulted in the Clunie generators coming online in April, June and November 1950, while the Pitlochry generators came online in October and December 1950. A formal opening by Lady MacColl was due to be held on 16 July 1951, but Edward MacColl died on the previous day. The second phase of the project involved constructing a dam across Glen Errochty close to the junction of the Errochty Water and Allt Con. This impounded the waters of those two rivers, to form Loch Errochty, and the volume of water impounded was increased by a long tunnel which headed northwards and then to the east, collecting water from several of the upper tributaries of the River Garry. A second tunnel and buried pipeline, long, fed the water from the loch to Errochty power station, at the western end of Loch Tummel. Errochty power station was larger than any of the other stations, with two turbines and an installed capacity of 75 MW. Water which passed through the power station was then used again at Clunie and Pitlochry. In order to maintain some flow on the Errochty Water, compensation water is fed through a pipeway and into the river channel. A small turbine is installed in the pipeway, so that even this water generates electricity. Three small stations completed the project. Gaur power station is located on the banks of the River Gaur, below Gaur Dam, which impounds water in Loch Eigheach. After passing through the turbine, the water is discharged into the River Gaur to reach Loch Rannoch. Because of its remote location, the station was the first in Scotland to be automated. Loch Ericht power station is on the eastern bank of Loch Ericht, and is fed with water from Loch Garry. Cuaich power station is the most northerly of the scheme, and its single turbine is fed from Loch Cuaich, which is dammed at its southern end. A tunnel brings further water to Loch Cuaich from Loch an t-Seilich, which is dammed at its northern end.
Water route There are four main water paths in the completed scheme, all of which ultimately discharge into Loch Tummel to feed the Clunie and Pitlochry stations. From the north the highest storage point in the scheme is at Loch an t-Seilich, which is at
above ordnance datum (AOD). The loch covers and has a catchment area of . Water passes through a tunnel to Loch Cuaich at AOD, which covers and has a catchment area of . This feeds the Cuaich station discharging into the north-east end of Loch Ericht at AOD. Loch Ericht has a surface area of and a catchment area of . A second path begins at Loch Garry, which is at AOD. It has a surface area of and a catchment area of . Water from Loch Garry feeds west through a tunnel to Ericht power station on the east bank of Loch Erich, and discharges into the loch. Water from Loch Ericht flows through a tunnel to Rannoch power station, which was part of the Grampian scheme, and discharges into Loch Rannoch. This is at AOD, covers an area of and has a catchment area of . From the west water from Rannoch Moor is impounded at Loch Eigheach, which is at AOD. It is relatively small with a surface area of , but its catchment area is . It feeds Gaur power station, discharging into the River Gaur, which flows into the western end of Loch Rannoch. At the eastern end of Loch Rannoch, Kinloch Rannoch weir regulates the outflow into the River Tummel, which soon reaches Dunalastair Reservoir, at AOD. Its surface area is and its catchment area . Water from Dunalastair Reservoir feeds Tummel power station, built as part of the 1930s Grampian scheme, with the water discharging into the River Tummel. In the centre of the system the headwaters of the River Bruar and of several of the tributaries of the River Garry are fed to storage at Loch Errochty, at AOD. It has a surface area of and a catchment area of . Most of the water feeds Errochty power station, which discharges into the River Tummel just to the west of Loch Tummel. Some bypass water, used to maintain a small river known as Errochty Water, is used to generate power at
Trinafour. Errochty Water joins the River Garry, which flows into Loch Faskally, and is the only power station in the scheme where the water does not eventually reach Loch Tummel. Regardless of path that it takes, most of the water arrives at Loch Tummel, where it is impounded by the Clunie Dam located in a narrow valley at the eastern end of the loch. The construction of this dam raised the water level by to create a reservoir with a capacity of 36,400,000cubicmetres. Loch Tummel is at AOD, has a surface area of and a catchment area of . Water then passes through Clunie station to
Loch Faskally which feeds the Pitlochry station. The scheme power stations are generally, though not exclusively, named for their physical location as opposed to the source of their water supply. For example, Loch Ericht station is fed from Loch Garry but is adjacent to, and discharges into, Loch Ericht. A notable exception is Errochty power station, which discharges into Loch Tummel. It is also known as Tummel Bridge to distinguish it from the nearby, pre-existing Tummel station.
Ecological impact The scheme made many changes to the natural water courses across the region. Many of the schemes rivers and lochs are categorised as Heavily Modified Water Bodies (defined as a body of surface water which, as a result of physical alterations by human activity, is substantially changed in character.) Near the highest point in the scheme the upper River Garry was completely dry for a distance of from the 1950s until a project in 2017 returned some water, around per second, to the section. Other associated changes included the removal of a weir at Struan to allow fish to pass up the river. The scheme has nine named dams and one weir. The 1930 dam at Ericht (for Rannoch) appears to have been extended as part of the later scheme. Listed by SSE as main dams are: Gaur, Errochty, Clunie and Pitlochry. and Tromie (Loch an-t-Seilich). A significant
weir at Kinloch Rannoch is also part of the scheme. ==References==