Aerial view of boats and docks stranded on the Lena river in Siberia 27 August 2019 Ruslan Ochirov
Aerial view of boats and docks stranded on the Lena river in Siberia 27 August 2019 Ruslan Ochirov

27 August 2019 (The Siberian Times) – Lena River fleet cannot sail after abnormal heat causes 2.5 metre water level drop.

The current water level means critical delays in the summer ritual delivering vital supplies to Arctic settlements in Yakutia, Russia’s biggest region.

Most of its remote corners are only accessible via water, with the lives of thousands of people depending on this traffic flow – which has been halted for weeks due to the low level of the longest river flowing entirely within Russia.

In regional capital Yakutsk the water dropped so suddenly that hundreds of cargo ships and smaller boats were left stranded in the sand.

Boats and docks are stranded on the Lena river in Siberia, 27 August 2019. Photo: Georgiy Andreev
Boats and docks are stranded on the Lena river in Siberia, 27 August 2019. Photo: Georgiy Andreev

Elsewhere along the river fishermen complained about an extremely low catch, saying that for days they were coming back home with empty buckets.

‘However many times I tried fishing with spinning and net, I caught nothing. I am now having to buy fish at shops, and many of us anglers fear that fish will die out in such shallow water’, bemoaned local fishermen Alexander Chigmarev.

It was this summer’s unusual heat that caused the record drought, said Moscow geographer Dr Natalia Frolova who visited Yakutia to observe dramatic changes to water level.

‘The abnormal heat recorded in Eastern Siberia in July and August, combined with lack of precipitation caused extremely shallow waters’, said Frolova, head of Hydrology at Moscow State University.

Aerial view of cargo ships stranded on the Lena river in Siberia, 27 August 2019. In the regional capital of Yakutsk, the Lena river water level dropped so suddenly that hundreds of cargo ships and smaller boats were left stranded in the sand. It was this summer’s unusual heat that caused the record drought. Photo: Ruslan Ochirov
Aerial view of cargo ships stranded on the Lena river in Siberia, 27 August 2019. In the regional capital of Yakutsk, the Lena river water level dropped so suddenly that hundreds of cargo ships and smaller boats were left stranded in the sand. It was this summer’s unusual heat that caused the record drought. Photo: Ruslan Ochirov

This summer’s drought is the worst in more than 30 years, with local farms and villages staying dry, too, as they take irrigation water from the river.

This in turn might start a vicious circle of villages getting more affected by wildfires, and wildfires speeding a next cycle of draught.

‘I don’t remember the Lena River ever being so low,’ said a 53 year old native of Yakutsk.

‘It wasn’t so bad even back in 1987 when water dropped to reveal a tail and body of an American bomber which crashed on one of the islands in 1943.’ [more]

World’s largest permafrost river dries to a record low