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Kakhovka reservoir before and after the dam was blown up. Water level in it fell down to 10,07 meters (it decreases about 6-7 centimeters per hour). By estimates, this decrease will continue for 6 ...
The water level in Kakhovka Reservoir has dropped by another metre over the last 24 hours and it continues to drop. Since the morning of 6 June, it has dropped by 4.7 metres.
The water level at the Kakhovka Reservoir has fallen by nearly 1.5 meters following Russia’s destruction of the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Power Plant’s dam in Kherson Oblast on June 6 ...
After the destruction of the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Power Plant’s dam by the Russian occupiers, the water level in the reservoir could fall below 7 meters. This was reported by the Telegram channel of ...
As of Thursday evening, the water level in the Kakhovka reservoir is 12.5 m, which is lower than the so-called "dead point", below which water intake is impossible. Source: Interfax Ukraine, citing ...
The rate at which the water level is dropping in the Kakhovka reservoir has accelerated to 35 centimetres per hour, said Vladimir Rogov, a Russian-installed official in the Moscow-controlled part ...
Water levels upstream from the Kakhovka Dam have receded since its destruction, threatening life and industry dependent on the Kakhovka Reservoir, including the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant ...
Then on Nov. 11, 2022, as Ukrainian forces advanced, Russian troops blew up a road over the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Dam, which controls the water level on the reservoir.
As the year wears on, things are likely to get even worse. The lowered water levels at Kakhovka have exposed a lot of vegetation along the shore line, Shumilova says. That in turn could lead to ...
KYIV, June 8 (Reuters) - The water level at a reservoir in southern Ukraine is approaching a dangerous low after the destruction of the dam at the nearby Kakhovka Hydroelectric Station, the state ...
The reservoir supplies drinking water, irrigates vast tracts of farmland, and cools Europe's largest nuclear plant. Satellite data show water levels plummeting at the Kakhovka Reservoir.
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