8 September 2014

The Sunkoshi landslide dam breach

Posted by Dave Petley

The Sunkoshi landslide dam breach event

On Saturday night, apparently without warning, the landslide dam on the Sunkoshi River in Nepal abruptly breached, allowing the lake to mostly drain.  This event appears to have occurred without warning, such that one of the Nepal Army excavators was washed away.  The breach event appears to have been natural – a response to heavy rainfall – rather than a result of the attempts by the Nepal Army to widen the channel.  Whilst some damage has been reported downstream, the flood does not appear to have been exceptionally large, so no casualties have been reported. Republica has a very nice set of photographs of the breached lake and dam:

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Whilst Kapil Dhital (@bewitchkapil) tweeted this image of the lake this morning:

Sunkoshi landslide dam breach

Khapil Dhital (@bewitchkapil) via Twitter

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So what caused the breach?  This is the gauging data for the Bharabise station (upstream of the dam) and the Pachuwaghat station (downstream).  Note that the two sets of data use different y-axes. The flood peak generated by the breach event is very clear at Pachuwarghat, although this is not a very high peak.  The Bharabise station probably responded to rainfall – there is a dramatic increase in discharge a few hours before the flood wave reached Pachuwarghat.  Thus, it appears that the breach was initiated by this sudden increase in river flow in response to heavy rainfall:

Sunkoshi landslide dam breach.

This is clearer when the data for the few hours before the breach event are plotted:

Sunkoshi landslide dam breach

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In many ways this is the best possible outcome.  The release of most of the water means that the hazard has in effect been removed, but without causing a huge amount of damage downstream.  Unfortunately the huge amount of resource and effort that has gone into building the two new roads has been wasted.  Once again I would reiterate my opinion that a focus on deepening the channel, rather than widening it and building new roads, would have been a much more effective way to manage this hazard.  That the dam breached in a rainfall-induced event suggests that a targeted effort to deepen the channel could have resolved the crisis much earlier.