Dowleswaram Barrage
The Dowleswaram Barrage was an irrigation structure originally built in 1852 on the lower stretch of the Godavari River before it empties into the Bay of Bengal. It was rebuilt in 1970 when it was officially renamed as Sir Arthur Cotton Barrage or Godavari Barrage.[1]
Dowleswaram Barrage | |
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Location of Dowleswaram Barrage in Andhra Pradesh | |
Country | India |
Location | Dowleswaram, Rajamahendravaram, Andhra Pradesh |
Coordinates | 16.9307594°N 81.7657988°E |
Purpose | Irrigation, water supply |
Status | Operational |
Construction began | 1970 |
Opening date | 1982 |
Owner(s) | Government of Andhra Pradesh |
Dam and spillways | |
Type of dam | Barrage |
Impounds | Godavari River |
Length | 3,599 m[1] |
Website irrigationap |
Geography
The Godavari River empties its water into the Bay of Bengal after flowing nearly fifty miles from the Dhavaleshwaram Barrage. Rajamahendravaram is a city situated on the left bank of Godavari River. Upstream, where the river is divided into two streams; the Gautami to the left and the Vasistha to the right, forms the joining line between the West Godavari and the East Godavari districts. The dam alignment crosses two mid stream islands.
Original Dowleswaram Barrage
The original Dowleswaram Barrage (also spelled Dowlaisweram or Dowlaiswaram) was built by a British irrigation engineer, Sir Arthur Thomas Cotton and completed in 1850.[2] The barrage was constructed in four sections, which allowed flood passage during the construction period. The Dowleswaram Barrage was 15 feet high and 3.5 km long.
Cotton's many projects averted famines and stimulated the economy of southern India. Before this barrage was constructed many hectares of land has been flooded with water and was unused. The water would be worthlessly going into sea. But when Sir Arthur Thomas Cotton had built the barrage those unused lands were brought into cultivation and the water was stored and used. The Cotton Museum was constructed on behalf of Cotton's memory. It is a tourist attraction in Rajamahendravaram.
Modern Sir Arthur Cotton Barrage / Godavari Barrage
Between 1970-82, the barrage was reconstructed to a height of 10.6 m. The reservoir at present has a gross storage capacity of 83 MCM(million cubic meters)(2.93 Tmc ft) and a dead storage of 2.02 Tmc ft at 40 feet (12 m) MSL.[3] The Barrage consists of 4 arms with 175 bays having a length of 3.599 Kms. It benefits 65 mandals of East and West Godavari with 2 crops annually supplying water utilisation of nearly 100 Tmc ft [4]
Inadequate water inflows
During the rabi season of 2022–23, adequate water is not supplied to the canals due to a lack of sufficient water inflows into the reservoir as sufficient water had not been stored earlier in the upstream Polavaram reservoir. The natural flows normally available during the dry season in the Godavari River are being stored in Medigadda and Sammakka Sagar reservoirs which used to be available for use in Godavari Delta. To build up the water level/storage in the Polavaram reservoir to enable adequate water release downstream, water is released from the Donkarayi reservoir directly without using it for power generation in the lower Sileru power station.[5] At least 60 tmcft water storage is needed in the Polavaram reservoir or up to the safe level limit of the upper coffer dam of the Polavaram Project to supply water to the total cropped area during the rabi season.
See also
References
- "Sir Arthur Cotton Barrage / Godavari Barrage B00131". Archived from the original on 26 December 2018. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
- Hope, Elizabeth (1900). General Sir Arthur Cotton, R. E., K. C. S. I.: His Life and Work. London: Hodder and Stoughton. p. 120. ISBN 978-1444629965. Retrieved 26 December 2018.
dowleswaram.
- PIC AP01MH0126, National Register of large dams, Central water commission, Govt. of India, June 2019 Ed
- Sir Arthur Cotton Barrage(G.D.System), Water Resources Department, Government of Andhra Pradesh, https://irrigationap.cgg.gov.in/wrd/static/approjects/gdsystem.html
- "With little water in Polavaram, rabi crops likely to be hit". 22 February 2023. Retrieved 25 February 2023.