In Crimea, they assured that there were no risks of drought due to problems with the North Crimean Canal
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In Crimea, there are no risks to provide the population with water, despite the drying up of the North Crimean Canal, said the head of the region Sergey Aksenov.
The head of Crimea noted that the peninsula has enough water supplies for domestic needs. “Today, the filling of reservoirs is decent. Work continues on pumping water from underground sources. There are no risks in providing the population with drinking water in the region,” the governor wrote in his Telegram-channel.
He also said that the water level in the North Crimean Canal is gradually decreasing, including due to the ongoing irrigation of agricultural land.
According to Mr. Aksenov, there will be enough reserves in the canal for about 2.5-3 months. At the same time, he added, it is impossible to build a pumping station and a tract for supplying water from the Dnieper to the canal directly under the existing conditions, although there are no technical difficulties. The canal began to dry up after the destruction of the Kakhovskaya hydroelectric power station on June 6.
Recall that earlier in the Arbitration Court of Crimea registered a lawsuit to recover more than 152 billion rubles from Ukraine as damages from the water blockade of the peninsula.
Alexander Dremlyugin, Simferopol
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