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Did the Construction of the Bhumibol Dam Cause a Dramatic Reduction in Sediment Supply to the Chao Phraya River?

Matharit Namsai, Warit Charoenlerkthawin, Supakorn Sirapojanakul, William C. Burnett, Butsawan Bidorn

2021Water14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The Bhumibol Dam on Ping River, Thailand, was constructed in 1964 to provide water for irrigation, hydroelectric power generation, flood mitigation, fisheries, and saltwater intrusion control to the Great Chao Phraya River basin. Many studies, carried out near the basin outlet, have suggested that the dam impounds significant sediment, resulting in shoreline retreat of the Chao Phraya Delta. In this study, the impact of damming on the sediment regime is analyzed through the sediment variation along the Ping River. The results show that the Ping River drains a mountainous region, with sediment mainly transported in suspension in the upper and middle reaches. By contrast, sediment is mostly transported as bedload in the lower basin. Variation of long-term total sediment flux data suggests that, while the Bhumibol Dam does effectively trap sediment, there was only a 5% reduction in sediment supply to the Chao Phraya River system because of sediment additions downstream.

Topics & Concepts

SedimentHydrology (agriculture)Drainage basinEnvironmental scienceStructural basinHydroelectricitySedimentary budgetGeologyRiver deltaSediment transportDeltaGeomorphologyGeographyGeotechnical engineeringElectrical engineeringAerospace engineeringEngineeringCartographyHydrology and Sediment Transport ProcessesSoil erosion and sediment transportGeological formations and processes
Did the Construction of the Bhumibol Dam Cause a Dramatic Reduction in Sediment Supply to the Chao Phraya River? | Litcius