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Hunza Lake in Attabad - potential disaster in the making

New satellite image of the Attabad landslide, Pakistan
NASA have released a new ASTER image of the lake that continues to build behind the landslide at Attabad in Hunza, N. Pakistan. Included in this image is the outline of the lake as it was in their image in March, showing the increase in surface area:

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A couple of things to note on this image:
1. The red areas indicate vegetation. Given that this area is very close to being a high altitude desert, this indicates the location of cultivated areas. The image clearly illustrates the way in which cropland is now being inundated;
2. The cultivated area on the southern side of the image is Shiskat, which is built on a fan. The image dramatically shows how the recent growth of the extent of the lake has left this area completely isolated. If the lake were to last through the summer then this area is likely to face serious challenges next winter;
3. The danger posed by a further landslide into the lake creating a wave that could rapidly overtop the dam is dramatically illustrated here. There is no shortage of potentially unstable slopes. This is a source of very real worry to me now.

Meanwhile, the seepage rate continues to increase as the lake fills, and a new seepage point emerged yesterday. The graph of measured seepage against time shows the continuing increasing trend:

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Whilst the seepage is not yet at worrying levels, the rate of internal erosion from this water flow could increase rapidly as the flow rate rises. Therefore, we need to continue to be mindful of the threat that this seepage potentially poses, especially in the last few days. We cannot rule out the possibility of a piping-induced failure.

The rate of increase of water level has slowed a little over the last few days, probably because the surface area of the lake has dramatically increased. Based on current rate of filling this has pushed the estimated date of water flow through the spillway back a little to 25th-28th May. This may well come forward again if the rate of inflow into the lake increases, which is what we would expect at this time of year. As of yesterday, the freeboard was just 12 metres, with the rate of rise of the water level being about 80 cm per day. Downward excavation of the spillway has now apparently ceased at a total depth of 14 metres (against the planned 30 m); the focus is now on widening the channel. As far as I am aware there is no armouring of the structure to prevent erosion.
 
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Possible breach in Hunza Lake




Hazara people leaving homes

Friday, May 21, 2010
Our correspondent

MANSEHRA: Hundreds of families have left their homes for safer places in upper parts of Hazara because of potential threat of Hunza lake rupture.

The evacuation process started Thursday, with people moving to safer places after administrations in Kohistan, Battagram and Mansehra made announcements via loudspeakers. The people living on the banks of River Indus in upper parts of the region would be shifted to camps established in tents and educational institutions.

Kala Dhaka Administrator Tasleem Khan said the repatriation process had been initiated in the district and semi-tribal area of Kala Dhaka. He said five tented camps had been established for 2,700 families at Dudba Mera, Nawa Killay, Akazai, Chuskhand Hasssan and Madarah Kalwal in Kala Dhaka.

Tasleem Khan said that for 13,800 people of 20 villages in Darband, two big tented villages were established at Bradar and Chonia areas and four truckloads of food and other items were also dispatched there. He said the people were not being shifted to these camps so far, adding that all affected families might be shifted to the camps gradually.

In Battagram, 115 families have been shifted to safer places from different parts of Thakot and Allai. Sources said the provincial disaster management authority had provided the district administration 1,000 flour bags, 312 oil packets each weighing 16kg, 100 packets of dates, 300 tents and 1,000 food packets.
 
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this was on 10 days back......

Tarbela can absorb Hunza lake water[

Wednesday, 12 May, 2010

ISLAMABAD: The overflowing Hunza lake does not pose any threat to Tarbela dam which has sufficient capacity to store additional water.

Sources in the Indus River System Authority said the water level in Tarbela currently stood at about 1,388 feet, just above the dead level of 1,378 feet, that meant it still had more than 160 feet of capacity to be filled.

They said the storage level could be raised by 10 feet a day till such time it reached 1,500 feet.

When Tarbela’s storage level crosses 1,500 feet, safety requires it to be filled at the rate of two feet a day.


The sources said Wapda had not intimated it about any decision to release water from the dam in anticipation of any unusual water inflows.

On Tuesday, Irsa increased water releases to Sindh from 60,000 cusec to 70,000 cusec to meet its additional irrigation requirements and Balochistan’s share has been enhanced to 6,000 cusec from 2,000.( preparing the dam for disaster)

The sources said a delay in undertaking a study to assess the impact of rising water level at Hunza had fuelled apprehensions that the lake might overflow and people in large areas in downstream Hunza had moved to other places.

They said the water level at Hunza had increased to 314 feet and the lake had expanded to over 15 kilometres.

The sources said an official of the federal flood commission who had supervised the study had been sent to the National Disaster Management Authority on deputation despite initial opposition by the NDMA.


This was on 21st may...

Army takes over Hunza relief operation


Friday, 21 May, 2010

Two army helicopters started airlifting over 500 people of Gojal who were stranded in Aliabad because of suspension of boat service since Sunday. The army also transported floating bridges to sites where flood could damage the bridges.

He asked the authorities to immediately post a doctor in Shishkat. The Baitul Mal’s chief announced a grant of Rs50,000 for each affected family. The new Chairman of the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), Lf-Gen (retd) Nadeem Ahmed, visited the affected areas to oversee preparations to deal with an emergency.


According to experts, water inflow into the lake has reached 3,500 cusecs, with seepage of 150 cusecs, increasing the level by an average of 3.4 feet daily.

The 18kms-long lake has gained a maximum depth of 361 feet. About 12 feet of free board remains to be topped by the water from the spillway.

According to the experts, since the structure of the spillway was very narrow, the water level in the lake would continue rising for three days even after start of the release from the lake.


This is the first indication that tarbela dam may be at risk. If water flow is uncontrolled than dam safety would be compromised. There is a urgent need to start releasing water. The landslide dam is prone to another phenomenon , water and soil mixing together forming a colloidal mass without holding capacity. This happens due to seepage which is currently reported at 150 cusecs/day. If water reaches spillway then there will be large mixing leading to rapid deterioration of bonding & holding capacity of the dam. If there is sudden burst, then huge load of water and silt will travel downstream threatening all and sundry. Army has taken over but seems poorly prepared. However the distance to Tarbela dam from the dam burst site may save it by absorbing water before appreciable quantity of water reaches it.
 
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Experts warn of high tidal wave in Hunza


Saturday, May 22, 2010
By By M Asif Khan, Ghazanfar A Khattak & M Haneef
PESHAWAR: The natural lake formed by the blockage of the Hunza River from January 4, 2010 Attaabad landslide has grown to a volume of over 132 million cubic meters.

Glacial melting, avalanches and outburst of glacial lakes in the catchment since the beginning of May 2010 has substantially increased the rate of inflow, bringing the surface level of the lake 4m short of the bottom of the spillway created for the outflow of the impounded water across the landslide dam on May 20, 2010. An enigma for authorities and public has been the lack of reliable forecasting of scenarios when overflow starts in the next couple of days. There are more questions than answers. Will the dam withstand overtopping through the recently constructed spillway?

Pakistan has successfully experimented this with the Hattian landslide dam formed by 2005 Kashmir earthquake. But what if, unlike the Hattian situation, the dam fails as the overtopping begins? According to a 2003 survey by Italian scientists, most natural dam collapses coincide with the first dam overtopping. This leads to the next most crucial question that determines the downstream impact of the dam failure. Will the dam fail catastrophically and send a sediment-laden flood wave (as high as 60 meters) downstream inundating overbank habitats and seriously damaging infrastructure of roads, bridges and other communication means.

Alternatively, the dam may breach slowly over a time span ranging from a few days to a few weeks. This will, obviously be the most favourable situation. It will not only reduce the intensity of the debris-laden flood, avoiding serious inundations of overbank populace and damage to the KKH and bridges.

One would expect that experts, including geotechnical engineers and geologists, would have ready answers to these questions. The reality is that under natural environments there are so many variables involved that technical experts cannot make guaranteed predictions about the dam stability or the nature of the breach. At the most, different situation scenarios are developed. In the present case, governmental agencies have modelled flood heights and arrival time at various points in downstream sections of the Hunza, Gilgit and Indus rivers, assuming different durations of breach. In the case of catastrophic failure, their models predict a flood level of 36m that reduces to 7m in case of a breach spread over 24 hours.

In order to address these critical questions, a different approach adopted here involves comparison of the current situation with existing or past documented landslide dams. Italian scientists (2003) developed a database of world-wide landslide dams amounting to more than 500. According to these data, landslide dams widely vary in geographic distribution, physiographic settings, dimensions and stability. The world’s largest landslide dam is located in Tajikistan which formed in 1911 on Murghab River as a consequence of a strong earthquake in the Pamir Mountains. The 550 m high dam has survived to date and has never been overtopped as the inflow in the lake is balanced by outflow through seepage. World’s worst landslide dam outburst disaster is recorded in Sichuan province, China. The resulting flood extended 1400 km downstream drowning over 100,000 people.

Pakistan has a history of formation and catastrophic failure of landslide dams. Ken Hewit, a Canadian geomorphologist, has documented more than 35 natural dams formed in Karakoram-Himlayas of northern Pakistan in the past 500 years. Whereas a great majority of these formed in response to glacier surges, half a dozen of the natural dams formed in response to landslides. Amongst the historic landslide dams, an event at Raikot-Astor (Nanga Parbat) blocked the Indus River for more than six months with a catastrophic breach in June 1841 causing 25 m high devastating floods all the way to Attock. A Sikh army camped downstream from Tarbela was caught unaware resulting in causality of 500 soldiers. Another massive landslide dam and outburst occurred on Hunza River (some 4 km downstream from the site of the present-day Attaabad landslide dam) in 1858 when exceptionally high floods were again recorded at Attock. The same location was site of another landslide dam and outburst flood in 1962 but with lower intensity levels.

Pakistan is probably the only country in the world having suffered two major landslide-dam forming events in last five years. The Hattian dam formed on Oct 8, 2005 when a landslide was triggered by the magnitude 7.6 Kashmir quake. It survived to-date without failure. This well-documented landslide dam can be taken as an example for comparison with the January 4, 2010 Attaabad landslide dam, providing insight into the stability the latter. Both are formed by gigantic rock avalanches blocking the respective rivers, but have some critical differences.

The two essential parameters determining the stability of the landslide include volume of the landslide material (stabilizing factor) and volume of the impoundment/lake (destabilizing factor). The landslide volume in the case of Attaabad is lower by a factor of ~4, while the lake volume is 7 times higher than that of the Hattian landslide. The higher landslide volume in the case of Hattian landslide is due to its earthquake origin, in line with global data that suggest about three-times higher landslide volume for earthquake triggered landslides compared to those triggered by other mechanisms (e.g., rainfall or slope instability).

Likewise, the greater lake volume in case of Attaabad landslide dam is due to involvement of the high-energy Hunza River with a glacier-fed catchment region comprising over 12000 km2 area. In comparison, the Hattian landslide dam formed on a tributary stream rather than on the main Jhelum River, with a glacier-free catchment area of only 44 km2. Knowing that the Hattian landslide dam has stabilized (at least to-date, having survived more than four years), a simple stability factor can be derived based on lake volume/landslide volume ratio that amounts to 0.2. In comparison, this factor in the case of the Attaabad landslide dam amounts to 7, clearly demonstrating that the latter is substantially more unstable than the Hattian landslide dam. Historical data corroborates these observations. Of the 35 natural dams in the Karakoram-Himalayas of northern Pakistan formed in last 500, none has survived. This clearly shows that high-energy, glacier-fed rivers of this region wash out landslide debris dams, sometimes without leaving any remnants.

Once established that the Attaabad landslide dam is rated potentially unstable, the next question is when and how it is going to fail? Historic data from the Indus and Hunza rivers (1841 and 1858, respectively) suggest that landslide dams in these high-energy rivers have not survived more than 10 months at the maximum, depending upon the number of summer months involved. Glacial-melting induced water inflow in impounded lakes is so enormous that survival of any natural dam is questionable.

There is a general consensus the world over that overtopping is the most critical factor in dam failure. Overtopping commonly occurs when the reservoir is filled beyond its capacity. In some cases, overtopping can occur prior to complete filling in response to impact of avalanches, debris flow or landsliding in the newly formed lakes. In essence, it is the erosive action accompanying the overtopping that fails the dams.
Commonly, the slope failure on the downstream end of the landslide dam weakens the main dam to initiate breach. Sometimes, overtopping is accompanied by internal landsliding within the landslide material, resulting in lowering of the dam height. A third phenomenon is called piping, i.e., internal erosion through seepage channels. Surface erosion, landsliding and internal erosion may act simultaneously to bring about catastrophic failure of dam.

When Attaabad landslide dam is viewed in this perspective, it is clear that erosion accompanying the drainage through the newly constructed spillway will be a critical factor. Pre-existing active seepage through internal channels is expected to grow in volume and dimensions, enhancing internal erosion in the landslide body. Likewise, collapsing and internal landsliding within the landslide dam cannot be ruled out. Whereas failure is imminent, the time involved in complete failure is difficult to be ascertained. The presence of gigantic boulders in the landslide material is the only stabilizing factor capable of delaying catastrophic failure.

The historic data gives some useful clues about outburst floods following catastrophic breach of natural dams. The 1929 outburst flood from a natural dam on Shyok River was thoroughly documented and monitored up to some 1500 km downstream by Gunn (1930) and Mason (1932). According to these observations, the maximum flood rose to 13-26 m high in narrow gorges and 7-10 m in wide parts of the Indus River valley. Interestingly, flood levels rose to 7-8 m at Tarbela and Attock, respectively 1120 and 1194 km downstream from the outburst dam. This is almost identical to flood levels at Skardu at a distance of 500 km from the breached dam. This implies that flood levels rise 2-3 times higher in narrow gorges compared to places where valley floor is wide. Most importantly, Ken Hewitt (based on observations from Gunn, 1930 and Mason, 1932) concludes that “over much of their course in the mountains, the recorded (outburst) floods reach heights well above peak discharges from summer melting”.

In summary, whereas scientific and engineering forecasting about stability of landslide dams is marred by uncertainties, historical data both from the Karakoram region as well as from around the globe suggest that high-energy rivers (e.g., Indus, Hunza and Gilgit) marked by high lake volume of landslide material are unlikely to preserve such dams and, when the dams breach, flood levels reach heights far above the peak summer discharge in Karakoram-Himalaya rivers.The authors are on the faculty of the Department and National Centre of Excellence in Geology, University of Peshawar. Email: masifk@upesh.edu.pk
 
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Surging lake forces villagers to flee

By Zulfiqar Ali Khan
Sunday, 16 May, 2010

HUNZA, May 15: The surging waters of the lake that has formed on the Hunza river submerged more areas in Gojal tehsil on Saturday, forcing people to flee to safe places.

The lake washed away two bridges in Ghulkin and Hussain, on the Karakoram Highway, and cut off three villages from surrounding areas.

Over 90 houses, several orchards, crop fields and two community centres in Ayeenabad, Shishkat and many commercial areas in Gulmit town, the headquarter of the Gojal tehsil, have already been submerged.

The lake has expanded 18 kilometres upstream, leaving 25,000 people stranded.

Damage to property and losses incurred because of the blockage of KKH as well as its bridge has crippled life in the region, which borders China.

About 85 per cent of the population earns their livelihood through marketing of potato, which is not possible during coming years because of flooding.

According to a recent survey of a welfare organisation, the farming community earned Rs1.25 billion through the marketing of potato.

The survey reveals that the most suffering sector after household consumption would be education.

The collapse of the local economy has thus created the issues of affordability and access to education in calamity-hit areas.

There is also lack of any specific institution in this critical time to help children of families in economic crisis in continuing their education.

APP adds from Islamabad: People residing on the banks of Indus River in Shangla, Kohistan and Battagram districts in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province have started moving to safe places because of flash flood from the Hunza river after entering the Indus could hit these areas.

District authorities have started registration of the displaced families.

Thousands of people residing along the banks of Indus in Bisham town, Sindh Colony, Shang, Mera, Dandai, Thakot, Pattan, Dubair and Jemal areas may be evacuated to safe places.

Besides expected flash flood from the Hunza river, the flow of water in the Indus has increased manifold because of rise in temperature.

The Provincial Disaster Management Authority has transferred funds to the district coordination officers in Battagram, Mansehra, Shangla and Kohistan for necessary evacuation of the people.

According to the PDMA, about 900 families in Allai in Batagram district, 2,704 families in Kala Dhaka in Mansehra, 750 families in two sub-tehsils of Shangla and 6,507 families in Kohistan are included in the vulnerable population.
 
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Hunza floods threaten thousands


Thousands of villagers in northern Pakistan risk losing their homes to a lake formed by a landslide that could burst its banks within days. The military-run National Disaster Management Authority said 36 villages have been identified for evacuation in case the waters burst. The lake was created out of the Hunza river by a landslide on January 4, that killed 20 and left about 25,000 people stranded when the river was blocked.

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---------- Post added at 06:35 AM ---------- Previous post was at 06:34 AM ----------

Another town submerged as water level rises in Ataabad lake


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GILGIT BALTISTAN: Another town has been inundated due to rising water level in Ataabad lake whereas Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani will likely reach Gilgit today to review the situation. He will take an Ariel view of Ataabad lake and other affected areas.

According to administration of Hunza, Prime Minister’s visit to Hunza depends upon weather conditions. On the other hand, traffic has been suspended near Murtazaabad at Karakoram Highway since two days that suspended land link of Hunza and upper Nagar with other areas.

Talking to Geo News, Deputy Commissioner Hunza Nagar Waqar Taj said that rescue operation has been speed up to reopen the road and it will be opened for traffic till 3:00 pm today if no fresh land sliding will be occurred. He said operation is underway to remove wooden hanging bridges at four different places in Hunza Nagar to avoid damage in case of expected flooding due to water discharge from Ataabad lake.
 
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Hunza lake is now submerging towns and villages on daily basis.This going to be one huge lake....

Qaraqorum’s part, 5 villages submerged as water level rises

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HUNZA: At least five more villages and some part of Qaraqorum Highway have gone submerged under water after appearance of Ataabad tragedy, Geo news reported.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Gilani has postponed his aerial visit, due to take place today, owing to bad weather, however, the boat service has not been restored on account of aerial visits of Chief Minister Punjab Shahbaz Sharif and Governor Salman Taseer.

The water level has risen alarmingly over 337 feet, which submerged 15 kilometer long part of Qaraqorum Highway and left the major traffic suspended.

Talking to Geo News, Deputy Commissioner Hunza Nagar Waqar Taj said that rescue operation has been speeded up to reopen the road and it will be opened for traffic till 3:00 pm today if no fresh land sliding occurred.

He said operation is underway to remove wooden hanging bridges at four different places in Hunza Nagar to avoid damage in case of expected flooding due to water discharge from Ataabad lake.
 
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Overflowing lake threatens key Pak area


ISLAMABAD: An artificial lake formed by a landslide threatens to inundate scores of villages in Pakistan's northern areas and wash away portions of the strategic Karakoram highway connecting the country with China.

Official said thousands of people have been displaced and several thousand face the risk of losing their homes if the lake, formed at Attabad in Gilgit-Baltistan, breaches.

The lake, 18km long and 320 feet deep, on River Hunza was formed on January 4 and the flooding has so far left 25 dead. The lake has submerged a big chunk of the Karakoram Highway and threatens to wash away a number of bridges on the highway. "The trapped water in the lake has touched dangerously high levels. Everyday the water level increases by three feet," said a top Pakistani army engineer. "More parts of the highway could be washed away if the Lake's banks burst".

Around 1,700 people have been forced to leave their homes in the last few days after floods swept through Ayeenabad and Shishkat villages in Hunza district, about 750-km north of Islamabad. So far, more than 3,000 people have been displaced by the rising water levels upstream of Attabad. Another 1,500 locals are expected to leave their homes in a week or so when water will submerge the low-lying areas of the Gulmeet town, located on the northernmost limits of the scenic Hunza valley.

"We're expecting water from the lake to reach the spillway by May 27 and then (overflowing) will begin," a local official said and added that if Attabad Lake does flood, at least 36 villages could be submerged.
 
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there is danger to submergence of plains of pakistan coz of dangerously rising and expanding Hunza lake .There are 4 pic graphs in above post and some in this post. hunza lake much better and the corresponding danders it poses as it has been submerging villages after villages and towns after towns(already 36 villages gone under water +5 last week) portion of the karakoram highway is already gone under the lake lake.Danger lies to the flooding of plains of pakistan when monsoon arives in late june or early july.At present its lean summer period and the lake is rising almost 1 mere per day..what will happen in monsoon you can yourself contemplate....



HUNZA LANDSLIDE MONITORING


Most recent Data as of THURSDAY, MAY 13, 2010

The current situation at Attabad
This page provides the most recent data on the situation at Attabad, using data provided by FOCUS. Lower down the page you will find a log of changes to the data.

Most recent data: 14th May 2010

Current freeboard: 9.27 metres
Current lake depth: 101.22 metres


Rate of increase of lake level in last 24 hours: 0.91 metres
Average daily rate of increase of lake level in last 10 days: 0.93 metres per day

Rate of inflow: 70.75 cubic metres per second
Rate of seepage: 2.85 cubic metres per second


Estimated date of overtopping based on filling rate for last 24 hours: 24th May 2010

The estimated date of overtopping is likely to change. It is very possible that water flow will start earlier than the current estimate above.


Seepage at the Attabad landslide
These two graphs shows the seepage of water through the dam at the Attabad landslide. The first one shows the development of total seepage with time:

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The second shows the development of total seepage with lake depth:

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The water level at Attabad
This is the new graph showing the water level at Attabad. It has been compiled using the FOCUS data. The black dots are the measured water level. The red line is the level of the spillway. The gap between the two is the freeboard.

The latest that water flow can start will be when the water level reaches the lake level. Water flow could start earlier than this.

Most recent measurement: 14th May 2010

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Summary of current situation in the landslide at Attabad

Update 13: 12th May 2010 at 10:30 UT
This is a summary of the current situation with the landslide. Data correct to 11th May 2010 (10th May for NDMA data). Red indicates a rising trend from the previous reading and purple a falling trend. Orange numbers indicate no change. All data courtesy of Focus Humanitarian Assistance unless otherwise indicated. Please see notes of caution at the end of this post.

Please note that I am now calculating the date on which there will be flow through the spillway using the rate of increase for the last 24 hours. This is because the rate of increase in water level is now increasing quite quickly.

Current estimated date on which water will start to flow through the spillway:
Estimate based on current (24 hour rate) of increase of water level: 25th May 2010

Water flow through the spillway may occur sooner than this date.

Depth of lake (NDMA data) : 95.45 m (10th May)
Depth of lake (Focus data): 98.38 m
Freeboard (Focus data): 12.11 m
Length of lake: 15.80 km
Rate of inflow: 67.50 cubic metres per second (last measurement = 4th May)
Total seepage (NDMA data): 1.70 cubic metres per second (10th May)
Total seepage (Focus data): 2.05 cubic metres per second

Average rate of decrease of freeboard over the last 24 hours: 83.84 cm per day
Number of days to water flow at current rate of freeboard loss: 14 days

Estimated date of water flow through the spillway based on rate of loss of freeboard for last 24 hours (see note below): 25th May 2010. Actual flow may occur earlier than this date.

Seepage at the landslide dam at Attabad in Hunza
Latest update: 12th May 2010 using data up to 11th May 2010

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The water level upstream of the landslide at Hunza, and the rate of rise of the lake
Latest update: 10th May 2010 using data correct to 9th May 2010

Water level and spillway level (the gap between them is the freeboard)

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Rate of rise of the water level


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Data sources:
Lake level: NDMA daily reports
Freeboard (used to calculate spillway height): Focus daily reports (not available online)
Water level rise: NDMA daily reports (recalculated using lake level data)
 
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Avoiding a crisis

There’s nothing new about the fact that the response of authorities in Pakistan to emergency situations is habitually delayed . We let the water rise way above our heads before even trying to do something about it. In simple words, every problem is ignored until it becomes chaotic and we have a crisis at hand.

So there is nothing surprising about the fact that the plea of the people of Hunza went unheard for months. On January 4 , an artificial lake emerged as a result of a massive landslide, blocking the Hunza River. The landslide killed 20, and left about 25,000 people stranded. According to a report :

Some local experts are of the opinion that early use of powerful water pumps to ejaculate the water at the blockade site and subsequent start of work to make spill way across the debris could have saved Gojal from turning into a water bomb. As the situation deteriorates, the people are left in psychological trauma as they see their houses, properties, crops and plants getting submerged. Desperately they wonder why the authorities declared the disaster a minor issue in the first place. After outburst of the lake, will the people of Gojal survive along with remnants of their properties or would it be a desperate battle for survival?

The report aptly summarises the Hunza crisis and the authorities’ indifference that has resulted in creating mayhem. The government response is now that of sympathy. But is sympathy enough after months of indifference and exposure to psychological and financial trauma?


For over five months, the people of Hunza have waited for the authorities to respond to the deteriorating situation, to save their property and to rehabilitate them, but to no avail. Now, over 40,000 people are at risk of being displaced as a result of the flood. Adding insult to injury, the Hunza IDPs will now join ranks with the millions of internally displaced people who have had to leave their homes due to militancy in the past year. The striking figures presented in this report suggest that in 2009 over three million Pakistanis were displaced as a result of the ongoing offensive in the country’s tribal belt; the most in the world and three times more than the Democratic Republic of Congo, which falls in second place.


Despite these shocking, painful, and distressing revelations, the authorities remain apathetic to displacement crises. Instead energies and attention have been focused on political games and power tussles. The voice of a common man is too often snubbed or only heard when the damage is irreversible. On Saturday, hundreds of people in Hunza held a 20-hour long protest against the government’s apathy toward the situation. Most of them chanted anti-government slogans after being disappointed by Prime Minister Gilani’s failure to announce relief for the affected people.


The Hunza disaster is yet another failure of the civilian, popularly elected government. Once again, the army and international relief organisations have been requested to step in. This tendency to pass the buck makes one wonder whether there is any sense of crisis management in the country, or if the government even feels remotely responsible or is aware of its role in such a situation.


If we look at the history of crisis management before this, whether the crisis was caused by war or natural disaster, the government’s role lacks transparency. The Hunza crisis is a ticking time bomb both in terms of the unpredictable flood and the bottled up anger of the people. If the government does not take this opportunity to address the pending issues of crisis management now, it is only a matter of time that we witness yet another exodus.
 
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A large number of people living upstream of the Hunza River have been badly affected by the creation of a lake owing to a huge landslide in Hunza Valley in January 2010.

The landslide has completely blocked the passage of river water, creating a lake now called the Attabad Lake.

Since the inflow in the river has remained undisturbed, the lake is expanding backwards and its water has risen to a high level. The river receives its water from the snow which melts from the mountains and from glaciers.

The depth of the lake has become more than 350 ft deep. The ever - rising lake water has inundated cultivated lands and private and public properties and has displaced a large number of people who are being looked after by the provincial administration as well as by the Natural Disaster Management Authority.

The reason for this widespread devastation is that the lake water was allowed to rise to a high level. The authorities concerned are using too little equipment to fish out the wreckage from the villages. Even five months after the disaster much of the debris still remains there. If the equipment was insufficient, then controlled blasting, should have been employed to accelerate the progress. The Frontier Works Organisation does a good job with blasting as it constructed the Karakoram Highway by blasting all along its length.

An actual disaster seems to be looming large now, which may strike soon. The debris will be washed away with the high velocity of water that flows through. Bridges and villages will be destroyed by the onrushing floods. It will reach Tarbela but may not create any damage because its reservoir is nearly empty.
 
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may be its a gift from nature , members excuse my knowledge this could be silly but is it imposible to build some thing to let this lake stay as it is ?? . 26kms of fresh water , water dept can make a lot of money from it
 
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Hunza lake expected to spill by May 28
May 26, 2010




The Chairman of the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), Retired Lt General Nadeem Ahmed said water outflow from the Hunza lake is expected to spill over on May 28.

According to the National Disaster Management Authority, 2050 cusecs water is entering the lake due to melting glaciers while the water release is 197 cusecs.
Landslides are also expected as the water level in the lake has increased to 3.1 feet in the last 24 hours.

The Hunza Deputy Commissioner Zafar Waqar Taj said that lake water had inundated low-lying areas and the rate of increase in the lake’s water level had been steady. People from the 32 flooded villages have been evacuated and are not allowed to go back. All downstream villages have been evacuated.

The government of Khyber-Pukhtunkhwa province has been asked by Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority to prepare for a possible emergency in the districts of Shangla, Mansehra, Kala Dhaka and Kohistan, downstream from the Hunza Nagar district.

The region is under threat from flooding from a lake that formed after a landslide. Villages in Hunza-Nagar are reported to have been flooded. According to the FOCUS Humanitarian Assistance NGO operating in the area, villages in the Kohistan district are under threat, with some 30,000 to 50,000 people possibly vulnerable. The district has a scattered population of about 500,000, according to official figures.
Meanwhile, a medical team sent by the Punjab government is also arriving in Hunza today, while air service stands operational to provide relief goods and food to the affectees.


Hunza lake expected to spill by May 28 – The Express Tribune
 
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