Uri Dam

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Uri Dam, refers to the existing Uri-I Stage-I Hydroelectric Dam Project with 480 MW hydroelectric power generation capacity[1][2] and the downstream under-construction Uri-I Stage-II Hydroelectric Dam Project with 240 MW hydroelectric power generation capacity,[3] on the Jhelum River near Uri in Baramula district of the Jammu and Kashmir in India. Operated by the NHPC[4] and located very near to the Line of Control - the de facto border between India and Pakistan,[1] both are run-of-the-river projects because the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) gives Pakistan the exclusive right to regulate the Jhelum River.[2]

CountryIndia
Openingdate1997
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Uri Dam
Interactive map of Uri Dam
CountryIndia
Opening date1997
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Stages

Uri-I Stage-I project

Uri-I Stage-I project dam largely built under a hill with a 10 km tunnel.[2] Uri-I Stage-I project, construction of which started in 1989[5] and completed in 1997, cost approximately Rs. 33 billion (about 450 million EUR or US$660 million)[1] with the partial funding by the Swedish and British governments.[6] The construction was awarded by the National Hydroelectric Power Corporation in October 1989 to a European consortium called Uri Civil led by Swedish Skanska and including Swedish NCC and ABB and British Kvaerner Boving.[5] The workforce included about 200 foreigners and 4,000 Indians, many from the local area.[2][7][8]

Uri-I Stage-II project

Plans for constructing a 240 MW Uri-II plant were announced in 1998,[4] and foundation stone was laid in 2014,[9] and tender for construction was floated in 2025.[3] The delay in construction was caused because the Government of Pakistan objected to the project stating that it violates the Indus Waters Treaty.[4][10] On 4 July 2014, Prime Minister Narendra Modi laid the foundation stone for the Uri-I Stage-II power project.[9][11]

Current status

  • 2025 Jun: "Uri-I Stage-I" is operational since 1997,[1] and the "Uri-I Stage-II" construction tender were floated in 2025.[3]

See also

References

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