Katzarah Dam

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Katzarah Dam
Katzarah Dam is located in Pakistan
Katzarah Dam
Location of Katzarah Dam in Pakistan
Official nameکٹزارہ ڈیم
CountryPakistan
LocationSkardu, Gilgit-Baltistan
Coordinates35°19′41″N 75°36′59″E / 35.32806°N 75.61639°E / 35.32806; 75.61639
StatusPre-feasibility study
Construction began2024
Owner(s)Government of Pakistan
Dam and spillways
ImpoundsThree Rivers
Height860
Reservoir
Total capacity35000000 acre feet,
Power Station
Installed capacity15000 MW (max. planned)

The Katzarah Dam is a proposed dam located near Shyok, Shigar River, and Indus rivers in Pakistan.[1]

Site[]

The dam site is about 18 km downstream of Skardu, Pakistan and would create storage in three gorges.

Storage and power[]

Katzarah dam would create a reservoir up to 35 maf, the largest in the world and six times larger than Kalabagh or Basha. It would be able to generate about 15,000 MW of power.[1]

History[]

WAPDA Engineer discovered the dam site in 1957 by looking at the GTS maps later on he prepared a pre-feasibility report in April 1962. President Muhammad Ayub Khan requested the World Bank to send its experts to identify dam sites in Pakistan and other water resources projects. In 1968, Dr Pieter Lieftnick of the World Bank and his team identified Katzarah dam site near Skardu among others and called it Skardu dam. Confusion is being created by calling Katzarah as Skardu, the two different dam sites namely Katzarah and Skardu are 22 km apart. Therefore, both cannot be called Skardu. The World Bank Team fixes the site for on the upstream of Skardu town. It is immediately located on the downstream of the confluence of Shigar River with Indus River where a gauge site has since been established for the purpose. At this location the height of Skardu Dam is fixed as 310 feet, length 3700 feet and storage capacity as 8 maf. For confirmation reference may be made to Dr Pieter Lieftnick's report — pages 283 and 296.

References[]

  1. ^ a b "15,000MW dam project shelved by Wapda". Dawn. Pakistan. 22 September 2011. Retrieved 23 March 2020.


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