Zeyzoun Dam Explained

Zeyzoun Dam
Location Map:Syria
Coordinates:35.7175°N 36.3633°W
Country:Syria
Location:Zeyzoun
Status:Failed
Opening:1996
Demolished:4 June 2002
Dam Type:Embankment
Dam Height:320NaN0
Res Capacity Total:710000000NaN0

The Zeyzoun Dam is a failed embankment dam near Zayzun, Hama Governorate, Syria. It impounded water pumped from the nearby Orontes River. The dam was completed in 1996 and its primary purpose was the irrigation of about 14000ha. The dam's reservoir was filled in the winter and expended its water during the summer.[1]

The dam failed on 4 June 2002, killing 27 people, displacing 2,000 and directly affecting over 10,000. Hours before the dam failed, in the afternoon, cracks were noticed in the embankment. People were evacuated as water began to pour through the cracks. The water eventually breached an 800NaN0 wide hole in the dam which released a 3.30NaN0 high wave of water. The water engulfed 800NaN0, destroying 251 homes and damaging hundreds of others.[2] [3] Several international organizations, non-government organizations and nations sent aid.[1] Reportedly, Syrian officials had ignored warnings that the dam was in need of serious repair.[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Syria - Collapse of Dam/floods OCHA Situation Report No. 4. ReliefWeb. 26 February 2012.
  2. News: Syrian dam collapses. 26 February 2012. BBC News. 4 June 2002.
  3. Chanson. Hubert. Embankment Overflow Protection Systems and Earth Dam Spillways. Dams: Impacts, Stability and Design. 2009.
  4. Web site: Moubayed. Sami. A dam shame. Al-Ahram Weekly. 26 February 2012. Damascus. 2002.