Dnipro – Donbas Canal

Canal in eastern Ukraine
48°44′10″N 34°18′38″E / 48.73611°N 34.31056°E / 48.73611; 34.31056Ending coordinates49°10′21″N 36°59′09″E / 49.17250°N 36.98583°E / 49.17250; 36.98583Map

The Dnipro – Donbas Canal (Ukrainian: Канал Дніпро — Донбас, romanized: Kanal Dnipro — Donbas), also known as Dnieper – Donbass Canal (Russian: Канал Днепр — Донбасс, romanized: Kanal Dnepr — Donbass) is a canal in Eastern Ukraine, connecting the Siverskyi Donets with the Dnipro River. The canal is mainly to improve the area's depleted water supplies, and is one of the largest canals in the Dnipro basin.[1]

History

Throughout the 20th century, Soviet industrialization depleted the freshwater supplies in eastern Ukraine.[2] With the construction of Siverskyi Donets – Donbas Canal in the 1950s, the main source in Siverskyi Donets became further depleted.

Construction of a new canal between the Dnipro and the Donbas region began in 1969, and was originally planned on two stages: the first from the Dnipro river to near Izium, and the second towards the city of Donetsk. The first section opened in 1981, but construction of the second section was suspended, and that section never opened.[2]

Characteristics

The canal begins from the Dnipro river in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, and ends at the Siverskyi Donets in Kharkiv Oblast, for a total length of 263 kilometres (163 mi).[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Technical Report: Description of the Characteristics of Dnipro River basin. Summary" (PDF). European Union. January 2020. p. 14.
  2. ^ a b c "Dnipro-Donbas Canal". Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine. 1984.