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Fallujah Barrage


FieldValue
nameFallujah Barrage
imageFallujah Barrage USACE NWD.jpg
dam_crossesEuphrates
locationAl Anbar Governorate, Iraq
opening1985
location_mapIraq
coordinates

The Fallujah Barrage is a barrage on the Euphrates near Fallujah in Al Anbar Governorate, Iraq. Construction of the barrage was completed in 1985. Unlike many other dams in the Euphrates, the Fallujah Barrage does not include a hydroelectric power station and its main function is to raise the water level of the river for irrigation. The barrage consists of two separate parts. The main stretch of the barrage has ten gates measuring 16 x, allowing a maximum discharge of 3600 m3 per second. The second part on the left bank of the river has eight gates that are 6 m wide. These gates divert water toward two separate irrigation channels. Their maximum discharge is 104 m3 per second.

The construction of the Fallujah Barrage was first proposed in 1923 as part of a large project to increase the production of cotton in Iraq. Construction of the barrage did however start only much later. The barrage was constructed adjacent to the actual Euphrates channel so that the water did not have to be diverted during construction. The Euphrates flow was only diverted toward the barrage in 1985 when it was completed. After the 2003 invasion in Iraq, repairs have been carried out at the Fallujah Barrage.

During the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant occupation of Fallujah in April 2014, insurgents took control of the barrage and closed its floodgates for several days which briefly deprived downstream areas of water. The gates were later opened likely due to flooding in upstream areas and excessive reservoir levels. The militants also opened the dam in an attempt to flood oncoming Iraqi forces.

References

References

  1. Iraqi Ministries of Environment, Water Resources and Municipalities and Public Works. (2006). "New Eden Master Plan for integrated water resources management in the marshlands areas". New Eden Group.
  2. Haj, Samira. (1997). "The making of Iraq, 1900-1963: capital, power, and ideology". SUNY.
  3. Fisher, William Bayne. (1978). "The Middle East: a physical, social, and regional geography". Routledge.
  4. Garamone, Jim. (24 April 2004). "Coalition Following Fallujah Agreement, Enemy Not Complying". American Forces Information Service.
  5. (9 April 2014). "Iraqi government forces say ISIS water supply sabotage foiled".
  6. "US launches airstrikes around Iraq's Haditha Dam".
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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