Study - Contamination From Russia's Destruction Of Khakova Dam in Ukraine Equivalent To Chernobyl Impact
The destruction of a large Ukrainian dam in 2023 triggered a toxic timebomb of environmental harm, a study has found. Lakebed sediments holding 83,000 tonnes of heavy metals were exposed when the Kakhovka dam was blown up one year into Russias invasion, researchers found. Less than 1% of these highly toxic heavy metals which include lead, cadmium and nickel are likely to have been released when the reservoir drained, the scientists found. They said the remaining pollutants would leach into rivers as rains wore down the sediment, threatening human health in a region where river water is widely used to make up for shortages in municipal water supplies.
The lead author, Oleksandra Shumilova, said the scale of the environmental impacts was comparable to the Chornobyl nuclear disaster. All these pollutants that were deposited on the bottom can accumulate in different organisms, pass through the food web, and spread from vegetation to animals to humans, said Shumilova, a scientist at the Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries. Its consequences can be compared to the effects of radiation.
The researchers linked on-the-ground measurements with remote sensing data and hydrology models to map the environmental impacts of the dams destruction, which flooded the region and killed 84 people. They estimated water from the breach killed 20-30% of floodplain rodents, along with the entire juvenile fish stock. They said the reservoir released 9,000-17,000 tonnes of phytoplankton each day in the first week after the dam was blown up, driving an increase in water turbidity that led to the probable loss of 10,000 tonnes of macroinvertebrates.
The destruction of natural life detailed in the study appears to contrast with the striking images of wildlife that has returned to the reservoir since the dam burst. White willows and black poplars have reforested the land, and wild boars and other animals have taken over areas that people still avoid. Fish that have not been seen for decades, such as sturgeon and herring, have returned to the water.
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https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/mar/13/destruction-of-ukraine-kakhovka-dam-caused-toxic-timebomb-in-rivers-study-finds