Ukraine dam’s destruction could ‘forever’ change ecosystems, officials say
The escape of the huge store of water from the reservoir will reshape Ukraine’s map, its habitats and its livelihood, endangering communities that depend on the water for drinking and growing crops, forcing farmers out of business, pushing towns to relocate and unsettling delicate ecological balances. Ukrainian officials warned that at least 150 tons of oil stored inside the hydroelectric power plant in the dam were washed into the waterway. Water from the reservoir also fed the cooling ponds of Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, in Zaporizhzhia, although nuclear experts said there was no immediate threat.
“There are catastrophic consequences for the environment,” Ukrainian Environment Minister Ruslan Strilets told reporters Tuesday.
“For some of our ecosystems,” he said, “we have lost them forever.”
The biggest and most immediate impact is likely to be to residents of southern Ukraine who depended on water from the reservoir for daily needs, as well as the farming that is the source of much of the country’s significant agricultural exports. Water from the reservoir irrigated the thirsty farming region of southern Ukraine, which has grown to depend on canals fed by the water in the decades since the dam was built in the 1950s. And although it’s possible that Ukraine can pump water out of the ground to make up part of the loss from the reservoir, it may quickly deplete it, said Doug Weir, research and policy director at the Conflict and Environment Observatory, a British organization that has been tracking the environmental impact of the war in Ukraine.
It will take weeks until the full consequences of such a massive and sudden shock to the river ecosystem will be clear, experts said.
The flooding will come more quickly than that, crossing some of Ukraine’s prized environmental sites, including the Oleshky Sands National Nature Park and the Black Sea Biosphere Reserve at the littoral area where the Dnieper flows into the Black Sea, which is home to wild horses and protected snakes and falcons. Some fish breeding grounds inside the shallow parts of the reservoir will also disappear.
“People will not have drinking water or cooking water,” said Anna Ackermann, a board member of Ecoaction, one of Ukraine’s leading environmental civic organizations, who added that she was concerned above all else about the human impact of the dam’s destruction. “There will be no water to grow fields.”
She also said that pollutants from industries clustered along the banks of the Dnieper River, downstream from the dam, could easily be swept into the waterway and onward into the Black Sea. Warehouses and other industrial buildings in the city of Kherson and elsewhere already appear to be flooding.
“We don’t know yet what it will look like,” she said. “Imagine this flood that goes down, that washes away all of the dams and all of the landfills and all of the industrial areas. There will be many different pollutants in the water.”
Ackermann said there could even be some radiation risk leftover from the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster if contamination was trapped in sediments that had accumulated at the bottom of the reservoir that is now being washed away.
“You have lots of different debris that will flow into the flooding, including from all the factories and workshops that are producing and using chemicals and different toxic things,” said Mohammad Heidarzadeh, an assistant professor of architecture and civil engineering at the University of Bath.
“Dam breaks like this ultimately can release every hazardous material you can imagine. Everything gets washed away by the floodwater,” he said.
He noted that Brazil is still struggling to assess the impacts of similarly large dam breaks that took place years ago.
And since the Dnieper River has been a front line in the conflict, a sudden flood could hold other dangers, experts said, including sweeping away anti-personnel mines that had been placed on embankments and moving them to other, unexpected locations.
“There’s a huge amount of unexploded ordnance and mines which are now being scoured by pretty aggressive floodwaters,” Weir said.
“Mines are being moved and remobilized,” he said. “Presumably, the Ukrainian and Russian forces would have had maps of these minefields. Floodwater moves them and redistributes them.”
A group of Swedish engineers had in October modeled the potential fallout in the event that Russia were to use explosives to destroy the dam.
The modeling, by the firm Damningsverket, predicted a wave of water 13 to 16 feet high would hit Kherson within 19 hours. The model predicted water gushing from the reservoir faster than water pours out of Niagara Falls, and cautioned that riverside towns would be overwhelmed.
One of the authors of that study, Henrik Olander-Hjalmarsson, said in a statement that the actual event will probably cause more damage.
“It appears the real-world scenario is worse than the one I modeled since the water levels in the reservoir were significantly higher than in the model,” he wrote in an email to journalists.
Ukrainian officials have also warned of a large release of oil — potentially more than 150 tons — that was stored inside the hydroelectric power plant inside the dam. That oil could have a significant impact, depending on how it behaves inside the massive rush of water, Ackermann said, although she said the implications were not yet clear.
Because the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant uses water from the reservoir to fill its cooling pools, there are some concerns about the long-term impact of the dam failure.
But the International Atomic Energy Agency said the facility is positioned to avoid a meltdown, as it has access to alternate pools of water that can keep the reactors and fuel rods cool for at least the next couple of months. Operations at the Soviet-era plant were largely dormant before the dam failure, experts said, which helped reduce the threat.
IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi cautioned that the facility remains on a high state of alert, as any disruption of the remaining cooling ponds could quickly elevate the threat of a nuclear incident.
The nuclear plant’s location upstream of the dam allowed it to avoid potentially catastrophic flooding. And experts said the plant was designed with fail-safes to keep cooling systems running in the event that water from the reservoir became unavailable, as is now the case.
“They have a pond that they can draw from,” said Henry Sokolski, a longtime nuclear proliferation adviser at the Defense Department and in Congress who is now executive director of the Nonproliferation Policy Education Center. “In normal times, it would be insufficient. Since they have had things turned off, they have enough water to keep it cool.”
He cautioned that the situation could change if the plant came under military attack and the backup pools were breached. “There are ways you could damage that fuel pond, but it does not seem likely,” Sokolski said.
The plant is under Russian control. While the IAEA has implored combatants to avoid fighting near it, that is probably unavoidable as Ukraine pushes to regain control of the area. That fighting threatens to further destabilize the situation.
“Water and electricity are the lifelines of a nuclear plant, even one that is shut down,” said Najmedin Meshkati, a professor of engineering and international relations at the University of Southern California.