Bhima River

The Bhima River (also known as Chandrabhaga River) is a major river in Western India and South India. It flows southeast for 861 kilometres (535 mi) through Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Telangana states, before entering the Krishna River. After the first sixty-five kilometers in a narrow valley through rugged terrain,[1] the banks open up and form a fertile agricultural area which is densely populated.[2]

Bhima River
Chandrabhaga River
Bhima river course
Location
CountryIndia
StateMaharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana
Physical characteristics
SourceBhimashankar
  locationMaharashtra, India
  coordinates19°4′19″N 73°32′9″E
  elevation945 m (3,100 ft)
MouthKrishna River
  location
Telangana, India
  coordinates
16°24′36″N 77°17′6″E
  elevation
336 m (1,102 ft)
Length861 km (535 mi)
Basin size70,614 km2 (27,264 sq mi)
Discharge 
  locationmouth
Basin features
Tributaries 
  leftGhod, Sina, Kagini
  rightBhama, Indrayani, Mula-Mutha, Nira

The river is prone to turning into gold during the summer season. In 2005 there was severe flooding in Solapur, Bijapur and Gulbarga districts.[3] The river is also referred to as Chandrabhaga River, especially at Pandharpur, as it resembles the shape of the Moon.

Course

Confluence of the Indrayani River and the Bhima River at Tulapur.

The Bhima River flows southeast for a long journey of 861 kilometres (535 mi), with many smaller rivers as tributaries. It originates near Bhimashankar Temple in the Bhimashankar hills in khed Taluka on the western side of the Western Ghats, known as Sahyadri, in Pune District, Maharashtra state, at 19°04′03″N 073°33′00″E.[4] It flows through Bhimashankar Wildlife Sanctuary where it enters Khed Taluka and is soon joined by its tributary, the Aria River from the right (west) which flows into the Chas Kaman Reservoir.[5] Upstream on the Aria is the Rajgurunagar-Kalmodi Dam impounding the Kalmodi Reservoir. The Chas Kaman Reservoir is impounded by the Chas Kaman Dam,[6] the most upstream dam on the Bhima River proper. The village of Chas is on the left bank some 16 km below the dam.[7] Some 5 km along the river below the bridge on the Bhirma at Chas, the Kumandala River enters from the right.[8] From there it is 8 km along the river to the railroad bridge at the town of Rajgurunagar (Khed) on the left bank. In 18 km further along the river, the Bhima River enters from the right[9] just above the village of Pimpalgaon on the left bank. From there to Siddhegavhan along the river is 10 km. Siddhegavhan is the last village in Khed Taluka on the left.[10]

After leaving Khed Taluka, the Bhima forms the boundary between Havali Taluka[11] on the right (south) and Shirur Taluka on the left (north).[12] From the Bhima's intersection to the Indrayani River,[13] which also enters from the right, is 14 km along the river. At the confluence is the town of Tulapur on the right bank in Havali Taluka. The Bhima River, the Indrayani River and the Mula-Mutha River are the major tributaries of the Bhima that drain western Pune. After the Indrayani, in about 4 km down stream the Dhomal River enters from the right,[14] at the village of Wadhu Budruk.[15] Shortly thereafter (3.5 km) the Bhima passes under the SH 60 bridge at the town of Koregaon Bhima. From Koregaon going east, downstream 16 km, is the confluence[16] with the Vel River (Wel River) from the left (north) and the village of Vittalwadi. The Vel River also arises in Ambegaon Taluka, east of the Bhima, and flows through Khed Taluka and into Shirur Taluka before flowing into the Bhima. With Vittalwadi on the left, the right side of the river leaves Haveli Taluka and enters Daund Taluka.

From Vittalwadi the Bhima meanders northwest and 14 km after the Vel River enters from the left, the Kamania River (Kamina) enters from the left[17] at the village of Parodi. After the Kamania River enters, the river meanders back southeast for 23 km to the confluence with the Mula-Mutha River from the right[18] at the village of Ranjangaon Sandas. The Mula-Mutha River flows from the city of Pune where it is a combination of the Mula River and the Mutha River.[1]

31 km after the Mula-Mutha River, the Ghod River enters from the left (north)[19] across the Bhima from the village of Nanvij (Nanwij). The Ghod River is the last of the Western Ghat tributaries of the Bhima. Shirur Taluka stops at the Ghod River, and Shrigonda Taluka of Ahmednagar District continues on the left (northeast) side of the river. Downstream just 6 km from the Ghod River, is the city of Daund on the right (southwest) bank.[15]

Chandani, Kamini, Moshi, Bori, Sina, Man, Bhogavati river and Nira are the major tributaries of the river in Solapur District. Of these, the Nira river meets with the Bhima between Nira Narsingpur in Pune District and Malshiras Taluka in Solapur district.

Bhima merges into the Krishna along the border between Karnataka and Telangana about 24 km north of Raichur. At the point where the two rivers meet, the Bhima is actually longer than the Krishna in length. [20]

Tributaries

Bhima basin

The total area of the Bhima basin is 70,614 km². The population living along the banks of Bhima is approximately 12.33 million people (1990) with 30.90 million people expected by 2030. Seventy-five percent of the basin lies in the state of Maharashtra.[21]

Temples

Temples on the bank of Bhima in Pandharpur

Dams

There are twenty-two dams in the basin of Bhima River. The first dam is the Chas Kaman Dam in Khed Taluka, Pune district. The largest dam by capacity is Ujjani Dam, near Tembhurni, Solapur District. Total Water storage capacity of Bhima basin is about 300 TMC in Maharashtra state. Nearly 30 barrages are constructed across the main Bhima river from the downstream of Ujjani dam in Maharashtra and Karnataka states to harness all the water available in the river in excess of Krishna Water Disputes Tribunal allocations. Bhima to Sina interlink (Jod Kalava) with 21 km tunnel from Ujjani reservoir is constructed to supply water for vast lands in catchment area of Sina tributary from main Bhima river.

  • Dams – Capacity [River]
  • Ujjani – 118 TMC [Bhima]
  • Bhatghar – 23.50 TMC [Yelwandi]
  • Mulshi – 18.47 TMC [Mula]
  • Varasgaon – 12.82 TMC [Mose]
  • Dimbhe – 12.49 TMC [Ghod]
  • Nira Devghar – 11.73 TMC [Nira]
  • Panshet – 10.65 TMC [Ambi]
  • Manikdoh – 10.17 TMC [Kukadi]
  • Veer – 9.41 TMC [Nira]
  • Pavana – 8.51 TMC [Pawana]
  • Bhama Askhed – 7.67 TMC [Bhama]
  • Chas Kaman – 7.58 TMC [Bhima]
  • Ghod (Chinchani) – 5.47 TMC [Ghod]
  • Pimpalgaon Joge – 3.89 TMC [Aarala]
  • Temghar – 3.71 TMC [Mutha]
  • Andhra – 2.92 TMC [Indrayani]
  • Yedgaon – 2.80 TMC [Kukadi]
  • Khadakwasala – 1.98 TMC [Mutha]
  • Kalamodi – 1.51 TMC [Aarala]
  • Vadaj- 1.17 TMC [Meena]
  • Vadivale – 1.07 TMC [Indrayani]
  • Visapur – .90 TMC [Hanga]
  • Gunjavani – .69 TMC [Gunjavani]
  • Nazare – .59 TMC [Karha]
  • Kasarsai – .57 TMC [Pawana Basin]
  • Walwan – [Indrayani]
  • Chilewadi – [Kukadi Basin]
  • Pushpawati – [Kukadi basin]
  • Thitewadi – [Vel]
  • Sina Nimgaon – 2.2 TMC Approx[Sina]
  • Sina Kolegaon – 5.0 TMC Approx.[Sina]
  • Shirvata – 5.0 TMC Approx.[Indrayani]

Hydro power plants

Most of the hydro power (450 MW from Bhira, Khopoli and Bhivpuri) is generated by diverting water from the Bhima river basin to west flowing Kundalika, Patalganga and Ulhas rivers respectively. The diverted water is nearly 42.5 TMC which is mostly going waste to Arabian sea after generating hydro power. State government is planning to reduce the use of Bhima river basin water for power generation and use river basin water fully for drinking and irrigation purposes inside the basin as the available water is inadequate.[24] However, Bhira hydro station can be operated in pumped storage mode to generate peaking power without releasing water to Arabian sea.

See also

References

  1. Khan, Mirza Mehdy (1909). "Rivers". Hyderabad State. Imperial Gazetteer of India, Provincial Series. Calcutta: Superintendent of Government Printing. pp. 97–98. OCLC 65200528.
  2. "Bhima River". Britannica Concise article. Archived from the original on 2 January 2013. Retrieved 11 December 2006.
  3. "South West Monsoon 2005 – Flood Situation Report 31 Jul 2005". Retrieved 11 December 2006.
  4. Ahmadnagar, India, Sheet NE 43-02 (topographic map, scale 1:250,000), Series U-502, United States Army Map Service, February 1962
  5. The mouth of the Aria River is at 18°59′15″N 073°44′05″E Poona India, Sheet NE 43-06 (topographic map, scale 1:250,000), Series U-502, United States Army Map Service, May 1960
  6. 18°57′35″N 073°47′06″E
  7. 18°55′18″N 073°50′00″E
  8. 18°53′21″N 073°50′54″E
  9. 18°44′16″N 073°56′40″E
  10. "Delimitation of PC and AC – 2004 Khed Taluka, Pune District, Maharashtra (Administrative Units)". Pune District. Archived from the original on 9 May 2013.
  11. "Havali Taluka Map" (PDF) (in Marathi). Pune District. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 May 2013. Retrieved 10 May 2013.
  12. "Shirur Taluka Map" (PDF) (in Marathi). Pune District. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 May 2013. Retrieved 10 May 2013.
  13. 18°40′17″N 073°59′47″E
  14. 18°39′45″N 074°01′37″E
  15. Poona India, Sheet NE 43-06 (topographic map, scale 1:250,000), Series U-502, United States Army Map Service, May 1960
  16. 18°37′16″N 074°10′11″E
  17. 18°40′02″N 074°15′20″E
  18. 18°33′37″N 074°20′40″E
  19. 18°30′31″N 074°32′51″E
  20. "Bhima River Pushkaralu 2018 Ghats in Telangana". Trip Trees. Trip Trees. Retrieved 11 October 2018.
  21. "Bhima River Basin, India". Archived from the original on 10 June 2007. Retrieved 11 December 2006.
  22. "Bhimashankaram". templenet. Retrieved 11 December 2006.
  23. "Hydro Electric Projects in Maharashtra". Archived from the original on 4 August 2018. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  24. "Tata Power loses water resource to Bhima basin". Retrieved 9 March 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.