May 3, 2024

Looming Water Crisis: Canals in Ukraine Are Drying Up Amid Global Food Supply Fears

Monitoring the Impact
Researchers with NASAs Harvest Consortium have actually been carefully monitoring the circumstance. Their main focus is to understand the effect of this occasion on farmers. The research study is part of a more comprehensive effort to develop analytical tools, based upon satellite observations, to rapidly evaluate how crop conditions and the war in Ukraine are impacting international food products.
” The major obstacle for farmers now is lack of water,” stated Inbal Becker-Reshef, NASA Harvests director. “Networks of canals that are typically fed by the Kakhovka Reservoir have actually become detached from the tank and are drying.”
Analysis by NASA Harvest reveals that all 4 of the major inlets that supply the canal networks have actually been disconnected. While abundant rains in spring and early summer season avoided the canals from going totally dry, satellite observations show a narrowing of the canals suggesting big decreases in the quantity of water.
World Labs satellite images from June 3, 2023 and July 19, 2023, reveal a closer view of modifications at the inlet of the North Crimean Canal.
Prospective Desertification
The Ministry of Agrarian Policy and Food of Ukraine kept in mind that the loss of water for hundreds of thousands of hectares might turn farmland in this location into “deserts” by 2024. The lack of watering might likewise have ripple results that trigger farmers to produce fewer crops on non-irrigated fields due to loss of income, according to the ministry. “A million and a half hectares will not be used to their complete capacity,” said Mykola Solskyi, the minister of agrarian policy and food of Ukraine.
Visual Documentation
The left image shows the inlets on May 17, 2023, when they were full of water. The second image shows the same canals on June 18, after water levels in the reservoir had dropped listed below what is required for water to go into the canals. (Note that the evident browning in the center-pivot fields is due to the typical harvest cycle, not absence of water.
The pair of images above, from Planet Labs, shows a closer view of changes at the inlet of the North Crimean Canal. The left image reveals the canal on June 3, 2023. The second image reveals the exact same area on July 19, 2023, as the inlet and canal were drying up.
Crops at Risk.
” Many of the summer season crops grown in Kherson– such as corn, wheat, sunflower, tomatoes, and melons– are greatly dependent on watering, and summertime rains are unlikely to be sufficient to maintain crop health and typical yields of irrigated crops,” said Becker-Reshef.
These satellite images from June 7, 2022 and June 18, 2023, reveal that after the dam breach, the reservoir that when sustained the canals mainly emptied, exposing broad areas of mud.
Satellite Imaging.
The factor for the irrigation difficulties appears in the set of satellite images above. After the dam breach, the reservoir that when sustained the canals primarily cleared, exposing broad expanses of mud. The leading picture of the set was acquired by OLI on Landsat 8 on June 7, 2022, about one year before the dam was damaged. The bottom image, acquired by OLI-2 on Landsat 9, reveals the same area on June 18, after roughly 75 percent of the water in the reservoir had drained– a volume of water roughly equivalent to Utahs Great Salt Lake.
Satellite altimetry data provided by the U.S. Foreign Agriculture Service and the French information services center (Theia) validated that water levels came by numerous meters over a couple of days right after the dam stopped working. This came after water levels had actually reached a 30-year high following a damp spring.
Flooding Impacts.
The image below programs flooding along the Dnipro River on June 9, 2023, three days after the dam was breached. For comparison, the other image reveals the exact same area on June 1, 2023. The most serious flooding was on the east side of the river, which is at an overall lower elevation and more flood prone than the west side. During the worst of the flooding, several thousand homes were inundated, tens of countless individuals lost power, and more than 40,000 were required to leave. Images before and during the flooding were gotten by the OLI on Landsat 8 and OLI-2 on Landsat 9, respectively.
Flooding along the Dnipro River on June 9, 2023, three days after the dam was breached, compared to June 1, 2023.
Efforts by NASA Harvest.
The NASA Harvest team– in partnership with Sertit (University of Strasbourg)– utilized Planet and Sentinel-3 data to produce a thorough map of flooded croplands, flooded towns, and open water that they provided to the Ukrainian Ministry of Agriculture as part of the humanitarian action efforts following the dam breach. They likewise continue to keep track of the primary canal inlets from the Kakhovka Reservoir and are establishing approaches to utilize satellites to track how much irrigation water fields receive throughout the summer season.
Crop Health Monitoring.
NASA Harvest analysts will likewise be monitoring the health of crops utilizing tools such as the GIMMS Global Agricultural Monitoring tool and the AGMET EO Indicator dashboard. These tools had not yet shown a significant drop in the greenness of crops by early July 2023 due to routine rains, though the loss of irrigation water might start to brown crops in the future.
Results on Ukraines Agriculture.
The semiarid steppe communities found in the Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, and Dnipropetrovsk oblasts generally get 100 to 120 millimeters (4 to 5 inches) of rain throughout the summer growing season– not typically enough for some crops to flourish without watering. More than 12,000 kilometers of canals constructed given that the 1960s have actually provided irrigation water for as much as 500,000 hectares (1,900 square miles) of croplands, turning the area into one of the most efficient farming areas in Ukraine. Canal water is likewise utilized for drinking water, industry, and other public usages.
Grain Exports Affected.
According to price quotes from the Ukrainian Grain Council, the flood might lead to a 14 percent decrease in the volume of Ukraines grain exports. In late June 2023, NASA Harvest estimated that Ukraine would produce 25 million heaps of wheat this year, about two million lots lower than the five-year average. NASA Harvest will continue to keep an eye on the scenario in the coming months and will post updates in its news feed.
NASA Earth Observatory images by Lauren Dauphin utilizing Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey, and Planet Labs images courtesy of Inbal Becker-Reshef.

The floodwaters started to decline after a few weeks, a slower-moving water crisis unfolded in southern Ukraine, where canals previously fed by the Kakhovka Reservoir are running dry.

The second image reveals the same canals on June 18, after water levels in the tank had actually dropped below what is needed for water to enter the canals. The bottom image, acquired by OLI-2 on Landsat 9, reveals the very same location on June 18, after approximately 75 percent of the water in the tank had drained– a volume of water roughly comparable to Utahs Great Salt Lake.
More than 12,000 kilometers of canals constructed given that the 1960s have supplied irrigation water for up to 500,000 hectares (1,900 square miles) of croplands, turning the region into one of the most productive farming regions in Ukraine. Canal water is also utilized for drinking water, industry, and other public usages.

When the Kakhovka Dam was breached on June 6, 2023, a subsequent flood led to a water crisis in southern Ukraine, as the canals normally fed by the dams reservoir started drying.
After the breach of Kakhovka Dam and the flood that took place, farmers in the location are coping with depleted water products.
The breach of the Kakhovka Dam in June 2023 has resulted in a water crisis in southern Ukraine, threatening farmland and international food products. NASAs Harvest Consortium is keeping an eye on the scenario and developing satellite-based tools to examine the effect, while authorities warn of possible desertification by 2024.
Inlets to the North Crimean Canal and the Kakhovsky Canal have lots of water in this image captured on May 17, 2023, by the Operational Land Imager-2 (OLI-2) on Landsat 9.
Water levels in the reservoir dropped below what is required for water to enter the canals in this image captured on June 18, 2023, by the Operational Land Imager-2 (OLI-2) on Landsat 9.
The Breach of Kakhovka Dam
On June 6, 2023, when the Kakhovka Dam was breached, water surged from the adjacent reservoir into the Dnipro River towards the city of Kherson and the Black Sea. This caused extreme downstream flooding. The floodwaters started to decline after a few weeks, a slower-moving water crisis unfolded in southern Ukraine, where canals previously fed by the Kakhovka Reservoir are running dry.