Mangla Dam
Mangla Dam
|
|
|
|
Country
|
Pakistan
|
Location
|
Mangla, Azad
Kashmir
|
Coordinates
|
33.142083°N 73.645015°E
Coordinates: 33.142083°N 73.645015°E
|
Status
|
Operational
|
Construction began
|
1961
|
Opening date
|
1967
|
Dam and spillways
|
|
Type of dam
|
Embankment dam
|
Height
|
138 m
(453 ft)
|
Length
|
3,140 m
(10,302 ft)
|
Impounds
|
Jhelum River
|
Reservoir
|
|
Creates
|
Mangla
reservoir
|
Capacity
|
7.25 km3(5,880,000 acre·ft)
|
Surface area
|
97 sq mi
(251 km2)
|
Power station
|
|
Turbines
|
10
x 100 MW
|
Installed capacity
|
1,000 MW
|
Maximum capacity
|
1,150 MW
|
The Mangla Dam is located on the Jhelum
River in the Mirpur
District ofAzad
Kashmir, Pakistan. It is the 16th largest dam in the world. It was built from 1961 to
1967 with funding from the World
Bank.
The project was designed and supervised by Binnie & Partners of London, and
it was built by Mangla Dam Contractors, a consortium of 8 U.S. construction
firms, sponsored by Guy F. Atkinson Company of South San Francisco.
Mangla Dam Contractors employed Pakistanis, Americans, British, Canadians,
Germans, and Irish.
Historic development
As part of the Indus Waters Treaty signed in 1960, India gained rights to the waters
of theRavi, Sutlej and Beas rivers, while Pakistan, in
addition to waters of the above three rivers within Pakistan and some monetary
compensation, received the rights to develop theJhelum, Chenab and Indus river basins through
construction of the Indus Basin Project. Until 1967, the entire
irrigation system of Pakistan was fully dependent on
unregulated flows of the Indus and its major tributaries. The agricultural
yield was very low for a number of reasons, the most important being a lack of
water during critical growing periods. This problem stemmed from the seasonal
variations in the river flow due to monsoons and the absence of storage
reservoirs to conserve the vast amounts of surplus water during those periods
of high river discharge.
The Mangla Dam was the first development project
undertaken to reduce this shortcoming and strengthen the irrigation system. The
dam was damaged due to an Indian
Air Force raid
during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971. As a consequence, the
hydro project was temporarily out of service from the country.
The Mangla Dam project
Mangla Dam is the sixteenth largest dam in the world. It
was constructed from 1961 to 1967 across the Jhelum
River,
about 67 miles (108 km) south-east of the Pakistani capital, Islamabad in Mirpur
District of Azad
Kashmir, Pakistan. The main structures of
the dam include 4 embankment dams, 2 spillways,
5 power-cum-irrigation tunnels and a 1,000 MW power
station.
A view of Turbine Outflow
Streams at Mangla Power House
The main dam is 10,300 feet (3,100 m) long and 454
feet (138 m) high (above core trench) with a reservoir of 97 square miles
(250 km2). Since its first impounding in 1967, sedimentation
has occurred to the extent of 1,130,000 acre feet (1.39 km3),
and the present gross storage capacity has declined to 4,750,000 acre feet
(5.86 km3) from the actual design of 5,880,000 acre feet
(7.25 km3). The live capacity has declined to 4,580,000 acre
feet (5.65 km3) from 5,340,000 acre feet (6.59 km3).
Butt, M. J., Mahmood, R., and Waqas, A. 2011, "Sediments Deposition due to
Soil Erosion in the Watershed Region of Mangla Dam.
The power station of Mangla dam consists of 10 units
each having capacity of 100 MW.
In order to remedy the storage capacity decreases, the
Pakistani government has decided to raise the dam by 40 feet (12 m), to
494 feet (151 m) high. This will increase the reservoir capacity by 18%
and provide an additional 120 MW(644 GWh) of power, but will displace
40,000 people currently living near the reservoir.
The project was designed primarily to increase the amount
of water that could be used for irrigation from the flow of the Jhelum and its
tributaries. Its secondary function was to generate electrical power from the
irrigation releases at the artificial head of the reservoir. The project was
not designed as a flood control structure, although some benefit in this
respect also arises from its use for irrigation and water supply. The
Government of Pakistan had agreed to pay royalties to the Government of AJK
(Azad Jammu and Kashmir) for the use of the water and electricity generated by
the dam. Over 280 villages and the towns of Mirpur and Dadyal were submerged
and over 110,000 people were displaced from the area as a result of the dam
being built. Some of those affected by the dam were given work permits for
Britain by the Government of Pakistan, and as a result, in many cities in the
UK the majority of the 'Pakistani' community actually originated from the
Dadyal-Mirpur area of the disputed region of Jammu
& Kashmir.
No comments:
Post a Comment