8.2.2

Flood Management: Hard Engineering

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Flood Defences - Hard Engineering

Hard engineering strategies aim to reduce the effects of flooding by building man-made constructions that control a river's flow. Examples of hard engineering strategies include:

Dams and reservoirs

Dams and reservoirs

  • A dam is a large earth, stone or concrete wall built across a river in the upper course. Behind the dam, a reservoir (man-made lake) forms.
    • Reservoirs can reduce flooding risk by filling up with water when there is a lot of rainfall. This water can either be drunk or used to produce energy (hydroelectric power).
    • But, dams are expensive and habitats and towns can be destroyed by the flooding needed to create a reservoir.
  • The soil downstream from a reservoir usually loses some of its fertility because minerals are deposited in the reservoir instead of downstream.
Channel straightening

Channel straightening

  • Bends and meanders are removed by constructing man-made, straight channels connecting the meanders.
    • Straight channels reduce flood risk by keeping the water flowing through an area quickly.
    • But, downstream areas are more at risk of flooding and erosion because more water flows there more quickly.
Embankments

Embankments

  • Embankments are walls built either side of the river channel to raise the height of the banks.
    • Embankments reduce flooding risk by increasing the capacity of the river.
    • But, embankments are expensive to build and if the banks do burst, then flooding can still happen.
Flood relief channels

Flood relief channels

  • Flood relief channels are secondary channels built alongside rivers that divert water away from particular areas or take it somewhere else if there is too much rainfall.
    • The amount of water flowing through a given point in a river is reduced (river discharge falls).
    • But, the river discharge will increase at the junction between the relief channel and the river it links up with.
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