Sanjha Morcha

No info from China on Pareechu flow, water panel seeks MEA help

Says neighbouring country stopped sharing info last year citing damage to monitoring site across the border

SHIMLA: It’s been a year since China shared information on the flow of the Pareechu, a tributary of the Sutlej river originating from the Tibetan Autonomous Region, raising concerns in the Central Water Commission that has now sought the external affairs ministry’s help to assess its hydrology.

PTI FILEPareechu, a tributary of the Sutlej, wreaked havoc in 2005 when a glacial lake was formed after its course was breached.

COMMISSION HAS TWO MONITORING STATIONS — ONE AT CHUMAR NEAR LEH AND THE OTHER AT SUMDOH IN LAHAUL AND SPITI DISTRICT AT THE CONFLUENCE OF SUTLEJ AND SPITI RIVERS

Commission regional director AK Gupta said, “We wrote to the ministry 10 days ago. China stopped sharing information about the tributary’s flow last year. They said that the water monitoring site across the border is damaged.”

The commission has two monitoring stations — one at Chumar near Leh and the second at Sumdoh in Lahaul and Spiti district, at the confluence of the Sutlej and its main tribuusing tary, the Spiti river. The flow is also monitored at Khab where the Sutlej has been dammed to generate 1,500 MW of power for the Nathpa-Jhakri hydel project.

The Himachal Pradesh government constantly monitors the flow in the Pareechu through its department of science and technology.

The lakes formed in the catchment areas of rivers originating from Tibet are monitored satellite imaging.

SURGING THREAT Pareechu wreaked havoc on June 26, 2005, when a glacial lake was formed after its course breached. The lake, the size of 20 football grounds, burst, flooding the Sutlej. The water washed away the strategic Hindustan Tibet road or National Highway 22 at a number of places. Ten bridges and 11 ropeways were swept away.

Fifteen bridges were damaged on the 10-km stretch of the highway between Wangtoo and Samdoh alone. Though no loss of life was reported, as many as5,000 people were evacuated under the army’s Operation Varuna. The total loss due to flooding was Rs 800 crore. Pareechu originates in India and meanders through China-occupied Tibet before merging into the Sutlej at Sumdoh.

 

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