Sélingué Dam

Coordinates: 11°38′17.7″N 8°13′47.2″W / 11.638250°N 8.229778°W / 11.638250; -8.229778
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Sélingué Dam
Local people on the shore of Lake Sélingué
Sélingué Dam is located in Mali
Sélingué Dam
Location of Sélingué Dam in Mali
Official nameBarrage de Sélingué (French)
LocationSikasso Region, Mali
Coordinates11°38′17.7″N 8°13′47.2″W / 11.638250°N 8.229778°W / 11.638250; -8.229778
PurposePower, irrigation
Construction began1979
Opening date1982
Construction cost140 million US dollars
Operator(s)Office of Rural Development of Sélingué
Dam and spillways
ImpoundsSankarani River
Height23 metres (75 ft)
Length2,600 metres (8,500 ft)
Spillway capacity3,500 m3/s (120,000 cu ft/s)
Reservoir
CreatesLake Sélingué
Total capacity2,630,000,000 m3 (2,130,000 acre⋅ft)
Surface area430 km2 (170 sq mi)[1]
Power Station
Turbines4 x 11 MW Kaplan-type
Installed capacity44 MW
Annual generation200 million kWh

The Sélingué Dam (French: Barrage de Sélingué) is an embankment dam with a gravity section located in the Sikasso Region, on the Sankarani River, one of the affluents of the Niger River. It is an important center of energy production in Mali surpassed only by the Manantali Dam on the Bafing River.

Its construction, at the cost of 140 million US dollars, was financed by several backers.

The dam has a crest length of 2,600 metres (8,500 ft) and a height of 23 metres (75 ft).[2] With a power output of 44 MW, the dam has an energy output of 200 million kilowatt-hours per year. The dam provides Bamako, Kati, Koulikoro, Ségou, Fana, Dioïla, Yanfolila and Kalana with electricity. It was brought into service in 1982, and renovated between 1996 and 2001.

The retaining basin of the dam forms the artificial Lake Sélingué. The water level has a maximum height of 349 metres (1,145 ft) but varies throughout the year. When full the lake stores 2.2 cubic kilometres (0.53 cu mi) of water and has an area of 409 square kilometres (158 sq mi).[2] It allows agriculture on the irrigated perimeters, managed by the Office of Rural Development of Sélingué, as well as fishing.[3]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ N'Djim, coordination scientifique: Jérôme Marie, Pierre Morand, Hamady (2007). Avenir du fleuve Niger = [The Niger River's future]. Paris: IRD Éditions. p. 177-239. ISBN 9782709916325. Retrieved 20 November 2015.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ a b Zwarts, Cissé & Diallo 2005, pp. 23–26.
  3. ^ Knaap 1994, Section 4.3 Sélingué Reservoir.

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