Aathupalayam Dam

Aathupalayam Dam
Location of Aathupalayam Dam in India Tamil Nadu
Official name Noyyal Aathupalayam Dam
Country India
Location Vellakoil
Coordinates 11°01′42″N 77°49′11″E / 11.02833°N 77.81972°E / 11.02833; 77.81972Coordinates: 11°01′42″N 77°49′11″E / 11.02833°N 77.81972°E / 11.02833; 77.81972
Status Operational
Construction began 1980
Opening date 1992
Dam and spillways
Type of dam Embankment
Height 14 m (46 ft)
Length 2,850 m (9,350 ft)
Spillway capacity 2,640 m3/s (93,000 cu ft/s)
Reservoir
Total capacity 6,660,000 m3 (5,400 acre·ft)
Surface area 1.6 km2 (0.62 sq mi)[1]

The Aathupalayam Dam is situated in Karvazhi village of K.Paramathi taluk in Karur district. The parched aycut area has not been receiving supplies as the Aathupalayam reservoir had become a storage tank for Orathuppalayam polluted water flowing down the River Noyyal over the past few years.

The storage facility was meant to harness excess flood water flowing down River Noyyal and draining from the Lower Bhavani Project (LBP) canal to irrigate more than 19,000 acres in Karur district. Usually the excess LBP water flows down the Malayathu Palayam banks only between September and December.

History

The construction work started in 1980 it could be completed only a decade later due to various factors including technical and financial delays leading to cost and time over runs.

However, the joy of the farmers was short lived as by 1995 the reservoir had become a repository of polluted water and sludge carried by River Noyyal from the dyeing and bleaching factories in Tirupur and Coimbatore regions.

Present

After the aycutdars repeatedly represented to the State government to bring the reservoir to proper use, a plan was executed to block the polluted waters of River Noyyal from entering the reservoir and allowing the LBP canal water to drain into the reservoir by constructing a check dam and work has almost been completed.

But the inlet canals, reservoir bed and other sites have silted up heavily for want of proper maintenance over the past 20 years. The sluices and shutters have been damaged heavily and have fell prey to nature's vagaries.

See also

References

  1. "India: National Register of Large Dams 2009" (PDF). Central Water Commission. Retrieved 22 November 2011.

External links

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