Kaptai Lake in dire state

Kaptai lake. Photo: UNB
Kaptai lake. Photo: UNB

Kaptai Lake, the biggest manmade lake in Bangladesh, is heading for a tragic end as sediment piles up and waste material continues to pollute it.

The 688 sq km, created by damming the river Karnafuli in Rangamati for hydroelectricity in 1960, has been providing livelihood for a large portion of the local population through tourism, fishing, transportation and more.

Pollution and the use of pesticides are playing a significant role in the decline of the water body, environmentalists have said.

The lake, connecting six sub-districts, is traversed by thousands of people every day. Waste and oil from the ferries and boats pollute it, apart from waste dumped by people living around it, locals said.

It is unclear how much waste, including plastic and polythene, is dumped into the lake daily. Deputy commissioner of Rangamati AKM Mamunur Rashid said he is not sure if there had been any clean-up drives.

'Never been dredged'

Siltation has turned out to be the major concern. The lake has never been dredged in 59 years, said Commodore Mahbub-ul Islam, chairman of Bangladesh Inland Water Transportation Authority (BIWTA).

Although the lake's average depth is nine metres, when the water level recedes, it becomes dotted with small shoals. Launches and steamers have to suspend operations until the water level rises.

It is not just affecting the people dependent on the lake but also hampering power production.

The 230-megawatt capacity hydroelectric power plant's production has come down to 110MW, said ATM Abjjur Zaher, the project manager, noting that the situation will not improve until there is adequate rainfall.

It is an alarming situation that calls for urgent and effective measures, local said. They call for dredging but environmental activists oppose this.

MA Matin, general secretary of Bangladesh Poribesh Andolon, a movement to protect the environment, argued that dredging is not a permanent solution.

The water is more or less stagnant when a dam is constructed, he notes. "If we remove the silt now, the basin will be filled up again in another 10 years," he said, recommending alternative action.

Deputy Commissioner Rashid admits that there are pitfalls but insists that it will be impossible to overcome the situation without removing the silt.
He says the lake is gradually becoming unusable because of siltation. "We've written to higher authorities but without any result. Recently, a BIWTA team has conducted a survey of Kaptai area," he says.

Landslide scare
People, pushing for dredging, are not realising that it will take time, Rashid says.

"You can't just dredge the lake. More research is needed before action, and issues like landslides should be considered," he tells UNB.

Md Mahbubul Islam, Soil Resource Development Institute's acting chief scientific officer in Bandarban, concurs.

"We can't deny the possibility of landslides since dredging will change the basin's structure," he says.

Islam suggests a long-term study and exploring ways to protect the area and warns that otherwise, there will be a possibility of damage.

He says the lake covers a huge area and needs time for studies or to start dredging. The process will be a "little bit complex", he notes.

Sunil Kanti Dey, a Rangamati-based journalist who has seen Kaptai Lake from its inception, says that it is now a pale shadow of its former self.

"Restoring the lake's former glory will be very difficult, if not impossible," he says. "It'll be too late if we don't act now."