By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
What Really Happened To The Kakhovka Dam?
On the morning of
June 6, water began to flow uncontrollably down the Dnipro River after the Kakhovka
dam in the Russian-occupied part of Ukraine’s Kherson region was destroyed.
Kyiv says the Russian military blew up the dam. Moscow, on the other hand,
blames “Ukrainian military groups.” Meanwhile, some open-source intelligence
analysts suggest that the dam may have collapsed on its own due to “unprecedentedly high” water levels in
the reservoir. Nickolai
Denisov, a geographer and one of the founders of the Swiss environmental
non-profit organization Zoi Environment Network, has
studied the ecological consequences of the war in the Donbas since 2014 and the
destructive impacts of Russia’s full-scale invasion on Ukraine’s ecology. Meduza asked Denisov to help decipher the contradictory
accounts of what happened to the dam and explain the subsequent flooding’s
possible consequences.
What do we presently
know about the destruction of the Kakhovka dam? Based on reports from the
Ukrainian energy company Ukrhydroenergo, an explosion
occurred in the engine room, effectively destroying the Kakhovka Hydroelectric
Power Plant, says geographer Nickolai Denisov.
The water will only
stop flowing from the reservoir when it reaches either the Dnipro River’s
natural limits or the lowered level at which the dam might still operate,
Denisov told Meduza, adding that it’s unlikely much
water will be left over in the Kakhovka reservoir after the flooding is done.
According to Ukrhydroenergo, this could take anywhere from two to four
days.
Ukrhydroenergo, the Ukrainian state-owned enterprise responsible for
overseeing numerous power plants along the Dnipro and Dnister
rivers, lost control over the Kakhovka plant months ago, making it unclear
exactly how the facility was administered or under what conditions it was
operating before Tuesday. “It’s hard to say who did what wrong where,” explains
Denisov. Still, he supposes that the reservoir’s water level before Tuesday’s
explosion was likely due more to natural conditions than mismanagement.
Asked if he thinks heightened
water pressure combined with Russian occupation forces’ clumsy supervision
might have been enough to break the dam, Denisov explained that his sources say
these Soviet-era dams were usually built to withstand substantial force — even
a direct missile strike, at least in theory. There’s no reason to distrust Ukrhydroenergo’s assessment that the cause was an explosion
in the engine room, he told Meduza. “I’m not a
military expert, but I do think this was [Russia’s] attempt to halt the advance
[of Ukrainian troops],” he added.
It’s hard to say
exactly how much the water levels will rise, but Denisov expects it to be at
least several meters. (A single meter is more than three feet.) Water-level
spikes will be lower further downstream, where the spill area is larger, but
that nuance will be lost on the locals caught in floods, he says. Some preliminary
calculations,
however, anticipate even worse overflows.
How soon residents
can return home safely depends on how quickly officials can restore critical
infrastructure. Since the area is close to the front lines, it’s hard to predict how combat operations could
affect such restoration efforts. As for the organisms living in the reservoir,
Denisov explains that they are adapted to the reservoir’s specific ecosystem,
meaning that many won’t survive these floods. The dam’s destruction has also
disrupted the local population’s water sources and irrigation systems. This
will affect Crimea since the Kakhovka reservoir supplies the North Crimean
Canal, which provides water to the Crimean Peninsula.
The dam's collapse
has also sparked concerns about how water shortages will impact the
Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, which relies on water from the reservoir.
Denisov says that water shortages resulting from the dam’s destruction could
make it difficult for the station to cool the temperature of its reactor.
Meanwhile, Ukraine’s state nuclear power company, Energoatom, reports that “everything is mostly under control,” and
the plant can now access backup water supplies.
Possible alternatives
for supplying cooling water could involve either routing pipes and pumps to the
river or “intensively exploiting groundwater,” though this is no easy feat in
an area so close to the front lines, notes Denisov.
In other
environmental fallout, the flooding has reportedly caused 150 tons of engine oil to contaminate the
Dnipro River, with another 300 tons still seeping in. Denisov estimates that
this amount roughly equals four or five railway tanks. In addressing the
consequences of the ongoing flooding, he says it’s impossible to influence the
speed of the water since it’s “a natural process.” It is possible, however, to
pump out some excess water if there’s proper access to the flooded areas,
pumps, and electricity.
Overall, though, it
looks like it’ll be a matter of waiting until the water levels subside.
Regarding rebuilding
the dam, Denisov cites estimates that it’ll take one to one and a half years.
“It’s a matter of strategic and political will — what the people and government
there want [to see].” “It’s an ecological catastrophe,” he answered when
asked if the dam’s destruction constitutes Europe’s largest ecological catastrophe in decades. The Chornobyl
disaster also looms large, of course.
Asked if he thinks
heightened water pressure combined with Russian occupation forces’ clumsy
supervision might have been enough to break the dam, Denisov explained that his
sources say these Soviet-era dams were usually built to withstand substantial
pressure — even a direct missile strike, at least in theory. There’s no reason
to distrust Ukrhydroenergo’s assessment that the
cause was an explosion in the engine room, he told Meduza.
“I’m not a military expert, but I do think this was [Russia’s] attempt to halt
the advance [of Ukrainian troops],” he added.
It’s hard to say
exactly how much the water levels will rise, but Denisov expects it to be at
least several meters. (A single meter is more than three feet.) Water-level
spikes will be lower further downstream, where the spill area is larger, but
that nuance will be lost on the locals caught in floods, he says. Some preliminary
calculations,
however, anticipate even worse overflows.
How soon residents
can return home safely depends on how quickly officials can restore critical
infrastructure. Since the area is close to the front lines, it’s hard to predict how combat operations could
affect such restoration efforts. As for the organisms living in the reservoir,
Denisov explains that they are adapted to the reservoir’s specific ecosystem,
meaning that many won’t survive these floods. The dam’s destruction has also
disrupted the local population’s water sources and irrigation systems. This
will affect Crimea since the Kakhovka reservoir supplies the North Crimean
Canal, which provides water to the Crimean Peninsula.
The dam's collapse
has also sparked concerns about how water shortages will impact the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant,
which relies on water from the reservoir. Denisov says that water shortages
resulting from the dam’s destruction could make it difficult for the station to
cool the temperature of its reactor. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s state nuclear power
company, Energoatom, reports that “everything is mostly under control,” and
the plant can now access backup water supplies.
Possible alternatives
for supplying cooling water could involve either routing pipes and pumps to the
river or “intensively exploiting groundwater,” though this is no easy feat in
an area so close to the front lines, notes Denisov.
In other
environmental fallout, the flooding has reportedly caused 150 tons of engine oil to contaminate the
Dnipro River, with another 300 tons still seeping in. Denisov estimates that
this amount roughly equals four or five railway tanks. In addressing the
consequences of the ongoing flooding, he says it’s impossible to influence the
speed of the water since it’s “a natural process.” It is possible, however, to pump
out some excess water if there’s proper access to the flooded areas, pumps, and
electricity.
Overall, though, it
looks like it’ll be a matter of waiting until the water levels subside.
Regarding rebuilding
the dam, Denisov cites estimates that it’ll take one to one and a half years.
“It’s a matter of strategic and political will — what the people and government
there want [to see]". “It’s an ecological catastrophe,” he answered when
asked if the dam’s destruction constitutes Europe’s largest
ecological catastrophe in decades. The Chornobyl disaster also looms large, of
course.
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