Title: Solomon B. Gebre
1Potential Experience of Dams in Ethiopia
- Solomon B. Gebre
- Project Manger
- Design of (four) dams in Lake Tana Sub-basin
Project
2Outline of the Presentation
- Country Background
- Water Resources
- Potential Status of Development
- Irrigation
- Hydropower
- Water Supply
- Existing dams
- Lessons To be Learnt (Two Case Studies)
- Dams under construction
- Future for dams
- Local Context
- Regional Context
3Country Background
- One of the 10 Nile Riparian Countries
- Population - 72.4 Million in 2004
- Growth rate - 2.3 per annum
- Population by 2016 96 Million
- Total Land Area - 1.104 x 106 Km2
- Socio-economy
- Agriculture is the dominant sector
- Largest Livestock population in Africa
- Per Capita income 90 -100 USD
- Water Supply coverage ca.35
- Electricity coverage ca.
4Water Resources
- 12 River Basins
- Total Surface water Potential of 122 BCM
- Renewable ground water Potential of 2.6 BCM
- About 97 of the surface water drains to
neighbouring countries - Water Tower
- Contribution to Nile Water ca. 86
5Primary x-ics of Water Resources
- Extreme interannual Intra-annual variability
- Droughts
- 19 periods of widespread severe food shortages
in the past 100 yrs alone - Spatial variability of rain flow
- Rainfall mainly in the highlands
- Lowlands are arid to semi-arid
- International nature of its most significant
water resources
6Potential Status of WR Development
- Hydropower
- Pot. Economical - 160 GWh or 30,000 MW
- Developed ca. 800 MW
- lt 3
- Irrigation
- Pot. Economical 2.7 Million ha
- Developed ca. 290,000 ha
- 10.8
- Water Supply coverage
- (Recent estimate by the MoWR)
- Overall 47
- Urban 80
- Rural - 41
7Justification for Dams
- Low level of development
- Food security of its peoples
- Access to Safe drinking water supply
- Access to affordable electricity supplies
- Resources of the country (Land, Water, Labour)
- Water resources are highly variable (spatially
and temporally) - Dams are required to safeguard its people against
the ill-effects of recurrent drought and bring
about development - Regional development specially by tapping the
countrys huge Hydropower Resources for the
regional market
8 Existing dams
- Authors compilation from various sources
- gt 50 Large dams ( According to ICOLD
Classification (2003))
- FAO - Aquastat Database 2006
- 10 Large dams
greater than 15 m in height from base to crest,
or storage capacity exceeding 3 million cubic
meters for heights between 5 and 15 m
9 Important Large Dams in Ethiopia
N Name of dam Major basin Yr. Completed Height (m) Initial Capacity (x103 CM) Purpose
1 Abasamuel Awash 1939 22.00 65 000 HP
2 Alwero Baro Akobo 1995 16.00 74 600 IRR
3 Angereb Tekeze 1991 34.00 5 300 WS
4 Dire Awash 1999 46.00 19 000 WS
5 Finchaa Blue Nile 1973 25.00 650 000 HP,IRR
6 Gafarsa Awash 1955 17.00 7 000 WS
7 Gilgel Gibe Omo-Gibe 2004 41.00 839 000 HP
8 Koka Awash 1960 42.00 1 860 000 HP,IRR,FP
9 Legadadi (Main) Awash 1979 40.00 38 000 WS
10 Legadadi (Subsidiary) Awash 1979 22.00 4 000 WS
11 Melka Wakena Wabeshebele 1988 40.00 750 000 HP
12 Midimar Tekeze 1996 33.00 10 000 WS
13 Chara Chara Blue Nile
1996 9 9,100,000
Regulation
Inoperative since 1970 Only the dam
construction has been completed CM Cubic
Meters
HP-Hydropower, IRR-Irrigation WS-Water
Supply, FP-Flood Protection
10Microdams
- Small dams (micro-dams) constructed for
irrigation supply are concentrated in the
Northern Amhara and Tigray regional states. - Construction took place b/n 1995 2000
- 64 Dams in Tigrai Region
- 28 are large dams according to ICOLD
classification - 14 dams in Amhara Region
- 12 are large dams according to ICOLD
11Performance of the Microdams
- According to a study in 2006 (Tefera B.), out of
the 14 microdams in Amhara - Only one of the 14 dams is functioning according
to the plan of implementation - hydraulic problems (16.7),
- hydrological problems (41.7),
- sedimentation problems (33.3),
- seepage failures (58.3), and
- structural failures (8.3).
- According to a study in 2003 (VLIR), out of the
64 microdams in Tigrai - Only 18 dams had no problems
- 24 dams have seepage problem
- Nine dams have sedimentation problems
- 13 dams have both sedimentation seepage
problems
12- Damaged spillway (Hydraulic failure)
- Syphon used to offtake water b/c of clogging of
the intake
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16 Common Problems encountered in Microdams
- Common problems identified include
- Overtopping due to inadequate spillway capacity
flood estimation problem - Seepage through foundation, abutments and
reservoir area site selection problem - Cracking or structural failure geotechnical
problem - Less inflow in the reservoir hydrological
analysis problem - Sedimentation- design problem and lack of
watershed Mgt. - Lack of proper maintenance and rehabilitation
work - The rush in implementation without adequate
investigation in all aspects - Problems identified should give a good lesson for
future building of similar dams.
17Dams under construction
N Name of dam River basin Expected year of completion Dam Ht. (m) Purpose
1 Tendaho Awash 2008 40
1 Tendaho Awash 2008 40 Irrigation of ca. 60,000ha
2 Kesem Awash 2008 90
2 Kesem Awash 2008 90 Irrigation of ca. 20,000 ha
3 Koga Abbay 2007 21 Irrigation of ca. 7000 ha
4 Tekeze Tekeze 2011 185 Hydropower of 300 MW, irrigation d/s of 60,000 ha
5 Gilgel Gibe II Omo-Gibe 2008 21 Hydropower of 420 MW
6 Gibe III 2011 240
6 Gibe III Omo-Gibe 2011 240 Hydropower of 1870 MW
Construction to begin soon
18Dams Under Construction
- Basin Blue Nile
- Purpose Irrigation Ca. 7000ha
- Project includes integrated WSM on 22,000ha
- Dam height 21m
- Embankment Dam
- Reservoir storage
- Reservoir area 1400 ha
- Financed by AfDB
19Dams under construction contd
Kesem Dam
- Basin Awash
- Multipurpose dam
- Dam ht. 90m
- Embankment Dam
- Irrigation 20 30,000 ha of sugar cane
- Hydropower under study
- Problems due to faults and artesian hot spring at
dam foundation - Financed by ETH. Govt
20Dams under construction Contd
Tendaho Dam
- Basin Awash
- Irrigation dam
- Dam ht. 40m
- Embankment Dam
- Reservoir storage 1.86 BCM
- Irrigation 60,000 ha of sugar cane
- Financed by Eth. Govt
- When Kesem Tendaho Projects start operation
sugar production will increase fivefold
21Dams versus the Environment
- Impact of dams on the Environment
- Impact of Environment on Dams
- Reservoir sedimentation due to land degradation
- Nutrient accumulation
- Physical, biological and socio-economic impacts
of dams
22Koka Dam Reservoir Sedimentation Its Impacts
(Eyasu E. 2003)
- Sediment deposited in the reservoir
- (over the past 40 years) 494 Mm3
- Average annual sedimentation rate 12 Mm3 or
2115 t/km2 - Loss of storage volume from designed storage
capacity - a) Designed storage capacity 1,667 Mm3
- b) Current storage volume 1,186 Mm3
- c) Loss of storage volume 481 Mm3
-
-
- Remedial measures to reduce reservoir siltation
-
- Sediment removal options
- Flushing Unacceptable downstream impacts
- Dredging Cost Very expensive US 8 9 per m3
This means US3.9 Billion for Koka dam - Disposal
- Other Engineering solutions
- Raising the dam
- Interbasin transfer of the river flow
- This will have serious social environmental
problems
23- Loss of power generation capacity
- c) Energy equivalent of per m3 of water 0.266
KWh - d) Energy equivalent of 481 Mm3 of lost volume
128 Million KWh - e) Price per KWh 0.473 Eth. Birr
- f) Total money value of lost power generation
capacity - 128 X 106 KWh X 0.473 Eth. Birr/KWh 60.5
Million Birr or 7.5 Million USD - Other secondary but important impacts are
- loss of Reservoir capacity to regulate water
supply for irrigation and flood control services
downstream. - which in turn resulted in breakage of dikes and
flooding of sugar plants and down stream towns. - Severe flood hazards have become a common
phenomenon in the downstream of Awash basin.
24Experience from Gilgel Gibe Dam
- found on the Gibe River in the Omo-Gibe River
basin - built for the purpose of hydropower.
- Rock fill dam with bituminous upstream facing
- Maximum height of 41m with a total storage
capacity of 91 MCM - The generation capacity of the plant is 184 MW
(three 61.3MW units) - Firm capacity 640GWH
- started in 1997
- commissioned in 2004.
- financed by the World Bank the Government of
Ethiopia.
25- Category "A" Environmental Impact Classification
due to some major environmental and social issues - the involuntary resettlement of 706 households
(ca. 5,000 people) - loss of 300 ha of riparian forest for wildlife
- altered downstream flow of 16 km of the Gilgel
Gibe river, - and increased habitat for water-borne disease
vectors - resettlement was completed two years ahead of
impounding, 4 years ahead of completion of civil
works. - resettlement cost was estimated at US4,600 per
household
26- post-resettlement assessments carried out in Dec.
2005 - the resettlement program was indeed carried out
according to the RAP in line with World Bank
Guidelines - Positive Indicators
- the quality of the new houses is superior to the
old houses - walking distance to health centers as well as
schools has been considerably reduced - Underperformance indicators
- the average yield level for all types of crops
has been reduced by 54, - the number of livestock owned by the resettled
household has been reduce by 72 - social infrastructure such as schools, health
clinics, and water points are in poor condition
and in need of immediate maintenance
27Conclusions Drawn from The Post-Resettlement
Assessment
- In spite of some underperformance, all
indications point to the fact that the PAPs are
better off now than prior to the resettlement
effort - This has shown that with proper planning and
implementation, it is possible to develop strong
resettlement efforts - In resettlement matters, this project was the
first one in the history of Ethiopia to carry a
constitutional resettlement under the New
Constitution - The Bank has also acknowledged (June 2001) the
project as good practice.
28Planned dams
- At present, the feasibility study and detail
design of at least 12 large dams for irrigation
development in four river basins is underway - When implemented, these dams will have a
potential to irrigate well over 150,000 ha - MoWR has planned at least 20 power projects
involving large dams with an aggregated power
generation capacity of over 10000 MW which are at
various levels of study - Four of these projects involve the construction
of large dams on the main Blue Nile River. - When implemented, these projects will enable
Ethiopia to export environmentally friendly power
to its neighbors and Nile Basin riparian
countries.
29Regional projects under NBI
- Projects accepted by the NBI Council of Ministers
consist of 4 hydropower and 4 irrigation projects
30Dams in Lake Tana Sub-basin
31IN CONCLUSION
- Ethiopias Path to Survival Development
- Depends to a large extent on
- Developing available resources (Land, Water
Labour) - Which requires
- Investing in Water Infrastructure
- where
- Dams are at the heart of this investment
- However
- Good governance of dams is a pre-requisite for
sustainable development