Monday, July 22, 2024

Mekong Dam Monitor (Update for July 22-28)

 

Update for July 22-28

Notable changes on the Mekong in the last week. Visit the Monitor home for more, including Burmese, 中文, Khmer, ພາສາລາວ, ไทย, and Tiếng Việt translation.

SPOTLIGHT

The Mekong Flood pulse is better than this time last year, but still below normal

In recent weeks the Mekong’s mighty flood pulse has expanded significantly, but it is still below normal bounds for this time of year. The image shows the current extent of seasonal flooding (blue) compared to normal (green). Currently there are 10,360 square kilometers of seasonal flooding, which is more than the 9,300 square kilometers observed last year in late July but lower than the normal flood range for this time of year from 10,800-19,900 square kilometers. The flood pulse is the key element which makes the Mekong the world’s largest freshwater fishery, responsible for around 20% of the global freshwater fish catch.

IMAGE OF THE WEEK

Significant restrictions in Vietnam’s largest Mekong Dams

The images below show the Yali Falls and Plei Krong dams, Vietnam’s largest on the Sesan River (a major tributary of the Mekong), both filling during the month of July. Last week alone, the Plei Krong reservoir rose by 11 meters, filling with an estimated 167 million cubic meters of water. While the reservoir sizes of these dams are less than a tenth the size of China’s largest dams, these wet season restrictions still have a measurable impact on reducing the Mekong floodpulse and its positive benefits.
                    Yali Falls Reservoir, Vietnam

Where is the water?

We tracked a large cumulative restriction of flow (1.65 billion cubic meters) at 17 dams across the basin last week. The most significant restrictions came from Xiaowan (PRC, 921 million cubic meters), Nam Ngum 1 (LAO, 220 million cubic meters), and Plei Krong (VNM, 167 million cubic meters). Restrictions are common at this time of the wet season but have a negative effect on the Mekong’s fisheries and agricultural outputs, which rely on high river levels throughout the wet season. 
Reservoir Storage Over Time

River Levels

River levels at Chiang Saen are more than two meters below normal and we estimate 50% of the river’s natural flow is currently being restricted in upstream dams such as Xiaowan. Above Pakse river levels are below normal levels. Below Pakse, river levels are slightly above normal. All gauges throughout the Mekong are trending downward. 
Chiang Saen Gauge
Stung Treng Gauge

Weather & Wetness

Above average wetness was observed in much of China’s upper basin, while it was drier than expected around the Golden Triangle. Eastern portions of Laos and the highlands of Vietnam were wetter than expected, largely due to a storm that passed over the area. Northeastern Thailand and Cambodia had a combination of wet and dry anomalies. Most of the delta in Vietnam was much wetter than expected, largely caused by precipitation and an increase in water level on the Mekong River. Temperatures were slightly above average throughout the basin last week.

MDM in the News

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