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Mettur Dam

Coordinates: 11°48′00″N 77°48′00″E / 11.80000°N 77.80000°E / 11.80000; 77.80000
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Mettur Dam
LocationMettur, Salem District, Tamil Nadu, India
Coordinates11°48′00″N 77°48′00″E / 11.80000°N 77.80000°E / 11.80000; 77.80000
Opening date1934
Dam and spillways
Height214 feet (65 m)
Length1,700 metres (5,600 ft)
Reservoir
CreatesStanley Reservoir
Capacity: 93.4 billion ft³ (2.64 km³) 2,146,071 acre ft
Details in Tamil

The Mettur Dam is one of the largest dams in India and the largest in Tamil Nadu, located across the river Cauvery where it enters the plains. Built in 1934, it took 9 years to complete.[1] Maximum height and width of the dam are 214 and 171 feet respectively. The dam receives inflows from its own catchment area, Kabini Dam and Krishna Raja Sagara Dams located in Karnataka. There is a park at the base of the dam called Ellis Park maintained by the Tamil Nadu Public Works Department. It provides irrigation and drinking water facilities for more than 12 districts of Tamilnadu and hence is revered as the life and livelihood-giving asset of Tamil Nadu

Demographics

As of 2011 India census, Mettur Town holding a population of 36926. Males constitute 57% of the population and females 43%. In Mettur, 11% of the population is under 6 years of age.

History

The United Kingdom provided funds for the dam [citation needed] and evacuated the people of Nayambadi village where the dam was sited. When the water level of the reservoir recedes, even now age-old Hindu temples emerge from it as proof. Those people who migrated from Nayambadi have settled down in Martalli and other nearby villages in the Kollegal taluk of Chamarajanagar district of the state of Karnataka.

Capacity

River Cauvery crossing Mettur Dam

The total length of the dam is 1,700 metres (5,600 ft). The dam creates Stanley Reservoir. The Mettur Hydro Electrical power project is also quite large. The dam, the park, the major hydroelectric power stations, and hills on all sides make Mettur a tourist attraction. Upstream from the dam is Hogenakkal Falls. The maximum level of the dam is 120 ft (37 m) and the maximum capacity is 93.47 tmc ft. Area of reservoir 42.5 square kilometer.

Its capacity of 93.4 billion cubic feet (2.64 km3) is nearly twice that of its Karnataka counterpart of KRS; It was built in-line with KRS Dam, which was designed by Sir M Vishveswariah[2] in 1911 and completed in 1917 near Mysore.

Water dispute

The Mettur Dam has received public attention since the latter half of the 20th century, and especially in the mid-1990s, due to the Kaveri River water dispute between the States of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka.[3] Because of subsequent dams constructed across the Cauvery and its tributaries in Karnataka, namely Harangi Dam, Hemavathi Dam, Kabini Dam, following the KRS Dam; Mettur Dam does not receive much water during lean seasons. As a result, the dam nearly goes dry during certain periods of the year, often when water is most needed by the farmers and the general public of Tamil Nadu. This has created serious dispute and tension between the neighbouring states of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. Governments of the respective states, the Supreme Court, and the Cauvery Tribunal have so far not been successful in resolving the dispute. The tribunal has specified an annual release of 192 tmcft by Karnataka to Tamilnadu. In the years of deficit in realisation the dispute aggravates in both the states. The major reasons for the deficit are inadequate realisation of Southwest monsoon in the primary catchment areas of the river viz., Kodagu and Wayanad and the over reliance of the river water for irrigation and drinking water schemes in both the states.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Mettur Dam". Archived from the original on 19 August 2006. Retrieved 22 November 2006.
  2. ^ "Mettur Dam completes 74 years. Do you know how we struggled before building the dam with Mysore Mettur Dam To Mysore On the way Reached Kolathur,..., India". Just91.com. Archived from the original on 3 January 2011. Retrieved 14 January 2011.
  3. ^ "Inter-state Water Disputes". Water Ministry - Government of India. Archived from the original on 12 February 2007. Retrieved 23 November 2006.