Dam collapses can be catastrophic events for people, infrastructure, buildings and natural ecosystems. Now, better access to remote sensing data from satellites is helping to keep an electronic eye on dams all over the world, providing early warning of potential problems. These techniques protect against collapses of dams of many kinds, including those at mine tailings storage facilities, hydro-electric installations, and reservoirs for human and agricultural use.
Big improvements in surveying technology
While collapse of a dam may happen within seconds, the dam may have been putting out warning signs for years – in the form of small-scale displacements of the dam that show that failure is imminent.
Traditionally, the dam’s operators will search for these warning signs by means of ground surveys – an approach that uses periodic measurements, perhaps annually, to monitor for deformations in the dam that hint at potential problems.
But there’s growing interest in supplementing this method from agents located hundreds or thousands of kilometres above the earth. Satellite imagery is not a new technology, but it is constantly improving.
Satellite-based solutions can monitor dams in any part of the world, as well as other ground features such as the slopes of open-pit mines and quarries, slopes adjacent to roads and rail lines, buildings, bridges and other infrastructure.