History, asked by jdabneys2450, 4 days ago

When Turkey constructed the Atatürk Dam in 1992, some neighboring countries were greatly affected. How much water loss did Turkey's neighbors experience due to the building of the Atatürk Dam?

Answers

Answered by rathodsunitasanjay02
1

Answer:

The Atatürk Dam is located on the Euphrates river in Bozova, south-east Turkey.

Built to supply water for irrigation and power generation, it is one of the largest dams in the country and ranks sixth amongst the largest earth-and-rock fill embankment dams in the world.

Previously called the Karababa Dam, it was renamed in the honour of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the first President of the Republic of Turkey.

Construction of the dam and the hydroelectric power project (HEPP) was undertaken from 1983 to 1990 at a cost of $1.25bn. The first two power units were commissioned in 1992, and its entire operations began in December 1993. State Hydraulic Works (DSİ) is the operator for the project.

Importance of the dam as part of the sustainable, integrated GAP scheme

The Atatürk Dam is part of the the Southeastern Anatolia Project (GAP), a large sustainable, multisector, and integrated scheme. It is the largest of the 22 dams, 19 hydroelectric power stations, and network of irrigation canals being built in the Euphrates, Tigris, and Upper Mesopotamia basins.

Envisaged in the 1970s, the GAP master plan aims to develop nine administrative provinces of the Southeastern Anatolia region. Projects on the Euphrates and Tigris rivers will provide water for irrigation and power to arid areas in south-eastern Turkey.

The total area of the irrigation scheme is about 75,000 square kilometres. It consists of 46.2% semi-arid cultivation farmlands, 20.5% forest land, and 33.3% dry pastures. Irrigation canals are expected to be completed in 2020.

GAP will double Turkey’s irrigation land and hydroelectricity production and also increase the per capita income in the region by 50%. It is also expected to quadruple the gross national product and provide employment to two million people.

"GAP will double Turkey’s irrigation land and hydroelectricity production and also increase the per capita income in the region by 50%."

When completed, the project is expected to supply water to around 1.8 million hectares of land and also generate about 7476MW of power. The total estimated cost of the GAP is $32bn.

Details of the Atatürk Dam, reservoirs and Şanlıurfa Irrigation Tunnel System

Atatürk Dam lies in the midst of the five dams currently operational on the Euphrates river. The Karakaya Dam and Keban Dam are located upstream of Atatürk, while the Karkamış and Birecik dams are situated downstream. Another two are also being built.

The rockfill dam with a central core has a crest length of 1,820m and height of 184m. It has a volume of 84.5 million cubic metres. Atatürk Dam has a catchment area of 92,240 square kilometres and annual inflow of 26,585 million cubic metres.

Called Lake Atatürk Dam is the third largest reservoir in the country, surpassed by Lake Tuz and Lake Van. The 817 square kilometre reservoir can hold a volume of 48.7 cubic kilometres of water. The full reservoir level of the lake is 542m above mean sea level (amsl) and minimum operational level is 526m amsl.

Two 26.5km long and 7.62m diameter parallel tunnels of the Şanlıurfa Irrigation Tunnel System divert water from the reservoir to the plains of upper Mesopotamia. The tunnel system has several branch canals and irrigation networks.

First water started flowing naturally through to the Harran Plain and vicinity areas for agriculture in November 1994. The Atatürk Dam project supports irrigation of about 727,700ha of land in the Mardin-Ceylanpinar plains.

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