Loch Glascarnoch


Loch Glascarnoch is a reservoir in the Scottish Highlands between Ullapool and Inverness. The reservoir was built by the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board as part of the Conon Hydro Scheme, and is dammed on its eastern end.

Details

The loch has an area of with a shoreline length of and is about long. The lake's water level is about above sea level and it is about from the sea. There are no islands in this lake. The loch is fed by Loch Garbhrain via the River Garbhrain from the west along with several other small streams that flow into Loch Glas-Carnach.
Built in 1957 for the Neart nan Gleann project, it has a dam that was built at the eastern end of the Glascarnagh Valley. The dam is high and is approximately long. The water flows through a tunnel approximately long to the Mossford Power Station. The power station produces approximately 18.6 megawatts, and an average of 121 million kWh per year. It was one of the dams built to generate hydroelectricity for the Conon Hydro-Electric Power Scheme. Today the scheme consists of six dams and seven hydroelectric power stations.The A835 runs along its southern edge, and the loch is a popular stop off point for motorists.
In the summer of 2020, water levels in the reservoir receded to the extent that old croft houses and bridges that were submerged when the reservoir was flooded were revealed.