The North Crimean Canal runs near the town of Lenino. In February, Russian forces destroyed a dam that Ukrainians had built to restrict the flow of water in the canal after Russia overtook Crimea in 2014. Photo by Aleksander Kaasik, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons War in Ukraine Lengthens List of Violent Acts over Water One of the first casualties of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was not a human life.
In late February, as Vladimir Putin’s war machine was beginning to uncoil, Russian forces destroyed a dam in Ukraine that was blocking water from a Soviet-era canal that flows into Crimea, the peninsula that Russia wrested from its neighbor in 2014. Ukrainians had erected the dam in retaliation for the loss of territory nearly eight years ago.
The destruction of the dam across the North Crimean Canal is the most recent entry in the Water Conflict Chronology, a compendium of violent acts related to water throughout 4,500 years of history. The database is maintained by the Pacific Institute, a water policy think tank.
In a March 2022 update to the chronology, the Pacific Institute is adding 376 entries, most of which occurred in the last three years. |