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The Xiaolangdi dam in China's Henan province.
The Xiaolangdi dam in China's Henan province. The researchers note big dams are a key source of hydroelectricity, flood control, irrigation and drinking water. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
The Xiaolangdi dam in China's Henan province. The researchers note big dams are a key source of hydroelectricity, flood control, irrigation and drinking water. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

World’s large dams could lose quarter of capacity by 2050, says UN

This article is more than 1 year old

Study suggests the thousands of dams clogged with sediment pose a threat to water supplies

Thousands of the world’s large dams are so clogged with sediment that they risk losing more than a quarter of their storage capacity by 2050, UN researchers have concluded, warning of the threat to water security.

A new study from the UN University’s Institute for Water, Environment and Health found that, by mid-century, dams and reservoirs will lose about 1.65tr cubic metres of water storage capacity to sediment.

The figure is close to the combined annual water use of India, China, Indonesia, France and Canada.

That is important, the researchers say, because these big dams are a key source of hydroelectricity, flood control, irrigation and drinking water throughout the world.

“Global water storage is going to diminish – it is diminishing now – and that needs to be seriously taken into account,” the study’s co-author and institute director, Vladimir Smakhtin, told AFP.

Researchers looked at nearly 50,000 large dams in 150 countries, and found that they have already lost about 16% of water storage capacity.

They estimated that if buildup rates continue at the same pace, that will increase to about 26% by mid-century.

Rivers naturally wash sediment downstream to wetlands and coasts, but dams disrupt this flow and over time the buildup of these muddy deposits gradually reduces the space for water.

Smakhtin said this “endangers the sustainability of future water supplies for many”, as well as posing risks to irrigation and power generation.

Accumulation of sediment can also cause flooding upstream and impact wildlife habitats and coastal populations downstream.

Sedimentation is a part of a larger issue: by 2050, tens of thousands of large dams will be near or past their intended lifespan.

Most of the world’s 60,000 big dams – constructed between 1930 and 1970 – were designed to last 50 to 100 years, after which they risk failure, affecting more than half the global population who will live downstream.

Large dams and reservoirs are defined as higher than 15 metres (49 ft), or at least five metres high while holding back no less than 3m cubic metres of water.

Global warming compounds the risk in ways that have yet to be fully measured.

“Climate change extremes like floods and droughts will increase, and higher intensity showers are more erosive,” Smakhtin said.

This not only increases the risk of reservoirs overflowing but also accelerates the buildup of sediment, which affects dam safety, reduces water storage capacity and lowers energy production in hydroelectric dams.

To address looming challenges of ageing dams and reservoir sedimentation, the study authors list several measures.

Bypass, or sediment diversion, can divert water flow downstream through a separate river channel.

Another strategy is the removal, or “decommissioning”, of a dam to re-establish the natural flow of sediment in a river.

But addressing water storage issues is especially complex because there is no one-size-fits-all solution, Smakhtin said.

“The loss of water storage is inevitable for different reasons,” Smakhtin said. “So the question we should be asking is what are the alternatives?”

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