Part 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on this task. Write at least 150 words.
The diagram below shows how electricity is generated in a hydroelectric power station.
Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features and make comparisons where relevant.

Samples
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The illustration depicts the process of electricity generation in a hydroelectric power plant.
Overall, the four-step cycle begins with storing water followed by managing water flow, and ends with the operation of turbines and generators.
The process begins as water is channeled from the river and stored in a high-level reservoir behind a dam. During daylight hours, the dam is opened to allow the stored water to flow towards reversible turbines. Simultaneously, these turbines operate generators, producing electricity from water flow. The generated electricity is then transmitted to the national grid via power lines.
After passing through the turbines, water is pumped into a low-level reservoir. During the night, the process shifts, with the reversible turbines now acting as pumps to retrieve water from the low-level reservoir. This water is then transported back to the high-level reservoir, positioning it for the next cycle of electricity generation.
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The illustration depicts the process of producing electricity in a hydroelectric power station.
Overall, it is clear that there are multiple stages to generate electricity, differing between day and night, beginning with the containment of water in reservoirs from the river and culminating in generating electricity by using reversible turbines which operate a generator.
At the beginning, in the daytime the intake in the dam opens, which means that all the water in the high-level reservoir, where its source is the river, flows to the low-level reservoir, after passing through the power station where reversible turbines generate electricity and send it through power lines to the national grid.
After this process, at night it is time to return water from the low-level reservoir to the high-level reservoir by reversible turbines, which at this time work as a pump to push the flow of water to the high-level reservoir, when its intake is closed at night.
Band : 8
The given process diagram illustrates the process of a hydroelectric power station, which produces electrical energy. Overall, there are several steps, beginning with water inlet and ending with the national grid and power lines.
Initially, a huge amount of water moves toward the dam and is saved. Literally, in the daytime, stored water moves toward the generator from a potential height, while, at night, the process reverses during pumping. Moreover, due to significant speed, it drives the turbine. As a result, it converts the mechanical energy to electrical energy. At the same time, the water moves through the outlet toward a low-level reservoir, and again the process repeats during the night.
Finally, the generated electrical energy is distributed through all grid stations with the help of power lines. Where, the voltage is adjusted by a transformer and then used for daily life appliances. Overall, the process demonstrates the production of energy by using water as a source without any disruption to the environment.
The figure illustrates the production of light by a water-driven electric grid station.
Overall, the water stored in the dam at altitude is opened in the daytime, which causes the water to flow downward, which in turn makes the reversible turbines rotate and leads to the generation of electricity, whereas in the nighttime the water is pumped back into the dam.
First, the water is diverted from the river to a dam made at a height from sea level. The lower gates of the dam are closed at night, whereas they are opened in the daytime. The opening of these gateways makes the water flow down the steep slope, which rotates turbines fixed in the generator of the electric station and operates it, and results in the production of electric light, and in the meantime the water is sent to a low-level reservoir in the daytime for storage. The generated current is then transported to the national grid through wires. Also, in the evening time, the stored water is pumped back up into the dam using rotating turbines for reuse.
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The diagram illustrates the process of generating electricity in a hydroelectric power plant.
Overall, it can be seen that the process by which electricity is generated, converting the flow of water into power, is a multistep, cyclical operation that consists of four main stages: filling a high-level reservoir with water, flow of water to the generator, generation of electricity during the day and pumping back water into the high-level reservoir during the night.
In the first stage, water from a river is collected in a tall reservoir, which is supported by a dam. Next, the water from the reservoir is transported through a downward-sloped path into a power station. Subsequently, in the third stage, the velocity of the water turns the turbines inside the generator to produce electricity, which then can be transported through power lines and added to the national grid.
In the fourth and final stage, the water that was used to generate electricity during the day is pumped back into the high-level reservoir through an upward-sloped path, thus completing the cycle. This process is done during the night and is not operated during the day.
hi….. where r u from and plzzz tell me how can improve this
The diagram illustrates the various stages involved in the process of generating electricity at a hydroelectric power station.
Overall, there are two different processes: the first is about obtaining electricity during the daytime; the second is about generating power at night. It is clear that the differences between these two processes are the direction of the water and the position of the dam. In addition, the reversible turbines operate differently during the daytime and at night, following a cyclic pattern.
In the initial stages, water from the river is collected in a high-level reservoir and goes through a large tube; in contrast, at night the water remains in this reservoir, with the dam blocking the opening. Then—in the power station—the water goes in the right direction to the low-level reservoir, while the generator produces power for the national grid.
At night, all water from the low-level reservoir goes through a second tube in the left direction; as during the daytime, the generator emits power; thus, this water flows in the opposite direction during pumping.
The diagram depicts the complex process that generates electricity in a hydroelectric power station.
Overall, there are several steps described in the aforementioned process of making electric energy. It begins with the water arriving from the river’s natural course into its high-level reservoir. It ends with its return from the power station’s low-level reservoir to the first one, as well as with the distribution of electricity throughout the national grid.
Firstly, the water is retained in the high-level reservoir by a dam. The station’s water intake is controlled. It is opened during the day and closed at night. The influx of water into the power station’s generator during the day through reversible turbines produces electricity, which then goes into the power lines and is distributed through the national grid.
Lastly, at night, there is an outward flow of water that returns directly to the high-level reservoir, which is a direct result of the turbines’ nightly reverse function. This restarts the cycle of the described process.