Everything about Volga-don Canal totally explained
Lenin Volga-Don Shipping Canal (abbreviated ВДСК,
VDSK) is a
canal, which connects the
Volga River and the
Don River at their closest points. The length of the
waterway is 101
km (45 km through
rivers and
reservoirs).
The canal forms a part of the Unified Deep Water System of European Russia. Together with the lower Volga and the lower Don, the Volga-Don Canal provides the most direct navigable connection between the
Caspian Sea and the
Sea of Azov, and thus the world's oceans.
History
The problem of connecting the two rivers goes back a long way in history. First canal work was done by the
Ottoman Turks in 1569.
Peter the Great made an unsuccessful attempt to build a canal in the late
17th century. Later on, they'd come up with several more projects for connecting these rivers, however, they'd never be carried out.
The actual construction of the Volga-Don Canal, designed by
S.Ya. Zhuk's
Hydroproject Institute, began prior to the
Great Patriotic War of
1941–
1945, which would interrupt the process. In
1948–
1952 the construction was completed. Navigation was opened June 1, 1952. During this period, the canal and its facilities were predominantly built by prisoners, who were detained in several specially organized
corrective labor camps. By 1952, the number of convicts occupied on the site topped 100,000.
Upon completion, the Volga-Don Canal became an important link of the Unified Deep Water Transportation System of the
European part of the
USSR.
Operation
The canal starts at the Sarepta backwater on the Volga River (south of
Volgograd) and ends in the
Tsimlyansk Reservoir of the Don River at the town of
Kalach-na-Donu. The canal has nine one-chamber
canal locks on the Volga slope, which can raise ships 88 m, and four canal locks of the same kind on the Don slope, which can lower ships 44 m. The overall dimensions of the canal locks are smaller than of those on the Volga River, however, they can make way for ships with up to 5,000-
tonne cargo capacity. The smallest locks are 145 m long,
17.0 m wide and 3.6 m deep; maximum allowed vessel size is 140 m long, 16.6 m wide and 3.5 m deep (Volgo-Don Max Class )
The Volga-Don Canal gets its water from the Don River, which is pumped into it by three powerful
pumping stations. Its water is also used for
irrigation purposes.
Types of
cargo that used to be transported from the Don region to the Volga region included
coal from
Donetsk,
mineral building materials, and
grain. Cargoes from the Volga to the Don included
lumber,
pyrites, and
petroleum products (carried mostly by
Volgotanker boats). Tourist ships traveled both ways.
The Volga-Don Canal, together with the Tsimlyansky water-engineering system (chief architect
Leonid Polyakov), represent an
architectural ensemble, dedicated to the battles for
Tsaritsyn during the
Russian Civil War and for
Stalingrad during the Great Patriotic War. The Russian
classical composer
Sergei Prokofiev wrote the
tone poem The Meeting of the Volga and the Don to celebrate its completion.
According to the Maritime Board (
Morskaya Kollegiya) of the Russian Government, 10.9 million tons of cargo were carried over the Volga-Don Canal in 2004.
It was reported in 2007 that over the first 55 years of the canal's operations, 450,000 vessels had passed through, and 336 million tons of cargo had been carried. Recent cargo volume stood at 12 million tons a year.
Future
As of 2007, Russian authorities are considering two options for increasing the throughput of the navigable waterway between the Caspian basin and that of the Black Sea. One option, often labeled "Volga-Don 2" (
Volgo-Don-2), is to build a second parallel channel ("second thread") of the Volga-Don Canal, equipped with larger, long locks. This plan would allow to increase the canal's annual cargo throughput from 16.5
m ton to 30m ton. The other option, which seems to have more support from
Kazakhstan (who would be either canal's major customer), is to build the so-called
Eurasia Canal along a more southerly route in the
Kuma-Manych Depression, which is currently used by the much shallower
Kuma-Manych Canal. Although the second option would require digging a much longer canal than Volga-Don, it would provide a more direct connection between the Caspian and the Sea of Azov; it would also require fewer locks, as the ground there's lower than in the Volga-Don area.
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