yes in a hydro dam
Can we produce power (electricity - www.powerfromgravity.com) from gravitaitonal (not from dam) force by using buoyancy from renewable source of energy?
Yes, they can. If a dam is placed across the river, falling water over the dam can drive turbines which produce electricity.
6000000000 volts
a lot
It produces 12000kilo
If you mean water electric plant as a dam, turbine generators are used there to produce electricity.
suck it
California's Gold - 1991 Shasta Dam was released on: USA: 21 November 2011
it forces the water to flow in the desired direction
The tunnels in the dam (what you see on the "low side" of the dam) dont produce electricity. These are the 'outflow' channels for water that is exiting a turbine (which is what generates the electricity). The weight of water behind the dam forces it down a tunnel to a turbine where the water pressure spins the turbine, which generates electricity. The water, once it passes through the generator, goes out a tunnel to a river below the dam. This is typically the water you see coming out from under a "hydro-electric" dam. There are also spillways to let excess water out from the reservoir (high side) behind the dam if the water gets too high.
About 5 miles up from any river, that flows from Shasta lake, will be flooded.