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Three things to know about Iraq's Mosul Dam

The Islamic State has targeted key energy infrastructure in Iraq, including Mosul Dam, which was recaptured yesterday by Kurdish and Iraqi forces backed by US airstrikes.

By Lydia Tomkiw, Staff writer

With the aid of US airstrikes, Kurdish聽peshmerga聽fighters seized control Monday of Mosul Dam, which had been held by the Sunni militant Islamic State (IS). Control of the dam is essential to Iraq鈥檚 energy and water resources; the United Nations considers it the聽鈥渕ost important hydropower station鈥澛爄n the country.

As the Monitor reported, IS has targeted key聽energy infrastructure in Iraq, including oil fields and water resources, as it expands its territory in Iraq and Syria.

In April, IS fighters captured the Nuaimiyah Dam in Fallujah and cut off water supplies flowing south to a primarily Shiite population. But a UN news agency reported聽that聽鈥渢he shutdown also triggered a surge into the Abu Ghraib irrigation channel, causing widespread flooding in an area that is mostly inhabited by Sunnis.鈥 The UN's special representative for Iraq said the damage included the displacement of more than 12,000 families and the flooding of "hundreds of houses and at least four schools."聽

In recent weeks, IS has tried and failed to gain control of Haditha Dam, the country鈥檚 second largest, which聽provides power to Baghdad.

Here are three key things to know about Mosul Dam and why it matters to Iraq and the region.聽

1. It used to be called Saddam Dam

Former president Saddam Hussein ordered its construction shortly after coming to power. Construction of the hydroelectric dam began in 1980 and was completed in 1984.

The dam supplies power to the national grid and has the capacity to generate 1,050 megawatts of electricity. A March 2014 UN report put the plant鈥檚 available capacity at 470 megawatts.

2. It's the largest dam in Iraq

The dam is also the Middle East鈥檚 fourth largest聽in terms of reservoir capacity. It is located in a valley approximately 45 miles north of Mosul on the Tigris River. According to the BBC, the dam holds more than 12 billion cubic meters of water, which is used for agriculture and energy generation. IS鈥檚 dam capture in Fallujah disrupted the agriculture sector and damaged crops there.聽

Approximately 85 percent of Iraq's water resources are used for agriculture, and many low-income families depend on irrigation. In recent years, farmers have planted more fruits and vegetables in place of traditional crops such as rice and tobacco, in part because of desertification and droughts. 聽

3. It's unstable and could trigger a massive flood

The dam was built on top of unstable ground that included soluble gypsum. Its structural deficiencies were exposed during construction; engineers have since managed to聽fix the foundations聽with cement injections and grouting, but this has created sinkholes.

In 2007, the US Army Corps of Engineers raised alarm over Mosul, calling it the 鈥渕ost dangerous dam in the world鈥 due to the 鈥渋nternal erosion potential of the foundation.鈥

US military commander Gen. David Petraeus and US Ambassador Ryan Crocker wrote to then-Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki warning about the danger the dam posed:

Should the dam collapse, the resulting flood could result in the deaths of as many as 500,000 people, according to US estimates. The Iraqi government disagreed聽at the time with the US assessment, saying, 鈥淭hese reports are not accurate and are totally untrue.鈥