Toktogul Dam

Summary

Toktogul Dam is a hydroelectric and irrigation dam on the Naryn River in the Jalal-Abad Province of Kyrgyzstan. It is concrete gravity dam with height of 215 metres (705 ft) and length of 292.5 metres (960 ft).[1] It is a part of the Naryn-Syr Darya cascade. It is named after Toktogul Satilganov.

Toktogul Dam
The hydroelectric dam fed by Toqtogul Reservoir
CountryKyrgyzstan
LocationToktogul
Coordinates41°39′25″N 72°38′10″E / 41.65707°N 72.63611°E / 41.65707; 72.63611
Construction began1960
Opening date1976
Dam and spillways
Type of damGravity dam
ImpoundsNaryn River
Height215 m (705 ft)
Length292.5 m (960 ft)
Spillway capacity245 m3/s (8,700 cu ft/s)
Reservoir
CreatesToktogul Reservoir
Total capacity19.5 km3 (15,800,000 acre⋅ft)
Active capacity14 km3 (11,000,000 acre⋅ft)
Surface area284.3 km2 (109.8 sq mi)
Maximum length65 km (40 mi)
Maximum water depth120 m (390 ft)
Power Station
Commission date1978
Turbines4 X 300 MW
Installed capacity1,200 MW
Annual generation4,400 GWh

The Toktogul Hydroelectric Station has installed capacity of 1,200 MW, which makes it the largest power plant in the country. It has four turbines with capacity of 300 MW each.

Toktogul Reservoir (Kyrgyz: Токтогул суу сактагычы, Kyrgyz pronunciation: [toqtoʁul suː sɑqtɑʁɯtʃɯ]; Russian: Токтогульское водохранилище) is the largest of the reservoirs on the path of the Naryn River, a northern tributary of the Syr Darya.[2] The reservoir has total capacity of 19.5 cubic kilometres (15,800,000 acre⋅ft), of which 14 cubic kilometres (11,000,000 acre⋅ft) is active capacity. Its length is 65 kilometres (40 mi) and its surface area is 284.3 square kilometres (109.8 sq mi). The maximal depth of the reservoir is 120 metres (390 ft).

The city of Kara-Köl, south of the reservoir (downstream from its dam) housed the dam construction workers, and currently is home to the hydro power plant staff. The city of Toktogul is located north of the reservoir.

Environmental and Social Impact edit

The reservoir was created in 1976 after construction works on the dam were completed and the Ketmen-Tobo Valley was flooded. The reservoir flooded more than 26 thousand hectares of land, of which 21.2 thousand hectares of agricultural land, 26 communities including large settlement Toktogul were displaced and the main road through the region was re-routed.[3] Archaeologists excavated barrows from Saka times before the sites were lost.[4]

2009 crisis edit

Toktogul Reservoir had a critically low water level in 2009. A cold dry winter, combined with water sales to foreign countries as well as increased domestic demand left the reservoir at a fraction of its capacity. Electrical rationing had to be employed throughout the entire country with outages lasting up to 11 hours every day.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ "List of major hydroelectric facilities Kyrgyzskoy Republic" (PDF) (in Russian). CA Water. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  2. ^ Irrigation in the countries of the former Soviet Union in figures. FAO. 1997. p. 128. ISBN 978-92-5-104071-3.
  3. ^ Shiriyazdanov, Sh. (1971). Токтогульский гигант строиться: очерк истории строительства ГЭС [Toktogul giant is being constructed: historical sketch of power plant construction] (in Russian). Frunze: Ilim. p. 445.
  4. ^ "Toktogul travel guide". Caravanistan. Retrieved 2020-05-11.