Social impact assessment of changing the water level in the Olushandja Dam

Includes bibliography. === The Olushandja dam is located in the northern part of Namibia, in the Omusati region - one of the four regions into which the former Ovamboland was divided after independence. The Olushandja dam is part of a two-dam supply system comprising the Calueque dam, on the Cunene...

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Main Author: Yates, Michelle Joan
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17001
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-170012020-10-06T05:11:13Z Social impact assessment of changing the water level in the Olushandja Dam Yates, Michelle Joan Environmental impact analysis Namibia - Olushandja Dam Water resources development - Social aspects Includes bibliography. The Olushandja dam is located in the northern part of Namibia, in the Omusati region - one of the four regions into which the former Ovamboland was divided after independence. The Olushandja dam is part of a two-dam supply system comprising the Calueque dam, on the Cunene river in Angola and the Olushandja dam in Namibia. Construction on Olushandja dam was completed in 1975. It acts as a storage and balancing dam for water supplied from Calueque. Olushandja dam is 17, 7kms long and about 300m wide. For the last 20 years it has been managed at 30% as this is the capacity at which evaporation balances injection of water into the dam and seepage. As part of a plan to upgrade the pumping facilities at Calueque and Olushandja dams, upgrading at Olushandja was initiated early in 1995, and involved repairing the north wall pump station and pumps, and the repair of the sluice gates at the south wall. Upgrading of the Calueque facilities is envisaged for 1996. With upgrading virtually complete at Olushandja, the UCT team were commissioned to conduct a SIA on the effect of changing the water level in the dam on the rural communities living in the vicinity of the dam. The SIA forms part of a full EIA looking at the overall environmental effect of changing the water level at which the dam is currently managed. The impact of the SIA will therefore be in terms of management rather than construction. 2016-02-15T07:06:49Z 2016-02-15T07:06:49Z 1995 Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17001 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Environmental impact analysis
Namibia - Olushandja Dam
Water resources development - Social aspects
spellingShingle Environmental impact analysis
Namibia - Olushandja Dam
Water resources development - Social aspects
Yates, Michelle Joan
Social impact assessment of changing the water level in the Olushandja Dam
description Includes bibliography. === The Olushandja dam is located in the northern part of Namibia, in the Omusati region - one of the four regions into which the former Ovamboland was divided after independence. The Olushandja dam is part of a two-dam supply system comprising the Calueque dam, on the Cunene river in Angola and the Olushandja dam in Namibia. Construction on Olushandja dam was completed in 1975. It acts as a storage and balancing dam for water supplied from Calueque. Olushandja dam is 17, 7kms long and about 300m wide. For the last 20 years it has been managed at 30% as this is the capacity at which evaporation balances injection of water into the dam and seepage. As part of a plan to upgrade the pumping facilities at Calueque and Olushandja dams, upgrading at Olushandja was initiated early in 1995, and involved repairing the north wall pump station and pumps, and the repair of the sluice gates at the south wall. Upgrading of the Calueque facilities is envisaged for 1996. With upgrading virtually complete at Olushandja, the UCT team were commissioned to conduct a SIA on the effect of changing the water level in the dam on the rural communities living in the vicinity of the dam. The SIA forms part of a full EIA looking at the overall environmental effect of changing the water level at which the dam is currently managed. The impact of the SIA will therefore be in terms of management rather than construction.
author Yates, Michelle Joan
author_facet Yates, Michelle Joan
author_sort Yates, Michelle Joan
title Social impact assessment of changing the water level in the Olushandja Dam
title_short Social impact assessment of changing the water level in the Olushandja Dam
title_full Social impact assessment of changing the water level in the Olushandja Dam
title_fullStr Social impact assessment of changing the water level in the Olushandja Dam
title_full_unstemmed Social impact assessment of changing the water level in the Olushandja Dam
title_sort social impact assessment of changing the water level in the olushandja dam
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17001
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