world’s largest dams

Kariba DamThe Kariba Dam forms a bridge between Zimbabwe and Zambia.

Dams are among the most massive human structures ever built, with many of the largest examples constructed using several million tonnes of dirt, rock, concrete, and other materials to span rivers or estuaries or to sequester lake water. Dams serve a variety of purposes, including storing water for human consumption and irrigation, generating hydroelectric power, protecting against peak floodwater discharge, and facilitating water navigation and recreation. Documenting the world’s largest dams is complex, since the notion of largest can be applied to a structure’s height and overall volume, the size of the reservoir it impounds, or the electric power it can provide.

The largest dams in the world are truly immense, often exceeding 240 metres (about 787 feet) in height and 60 million cubic metres (about 2.1 billion cubic feet) in volume. The volumes of the largest water reservoirs held back by dams range from some 60 billion cubic metres (2.1 trillion cubic feet) to nearly 3 trillion cubic metres (106 trillion cubic feet). The largest hydroelectric dams generate more than 10,000 megawatts of electricity.

World's largest dams
By height
name type1 date of completion river country height (metres)
1Key: A, arch; B, buttress; E, earth fill; G, gravity; M, multi-arch; R, rock fill.
2Vaiont Dam was the scene of a massive landslide and flood in 1963 and no longer operates.
3Diversion tunnels closed and reservoir filling begun December 2002.
4Impounds settling reservoir for fine tailings in oil sands operation near Fort McMurray, Alberta.
5Most of this reservoir is a natural lake.
Source: International Water Power and Dam Construction Yearbook (1996).
Nurek E 1980 Vakhsh Tajikistan 300
Grande Dixence G 1961 Dixence Switzerland 285
Inguri A 1980 Inguri Georgia 272
Vaiont2 A 1961 Vaiont Italy 262
Chicoasen ER 1980 Grijalva Mexico 261
Tehri ER 20023 Bhagirathi India 261
Mauvoisin A 1957 Drance de Bagnes Switzerland 250
Guavio ER 1989 Guavio Colombia 246
Sayano-Shushenskoye AG 1989 Yenisey Russia 245
Mica ER 1973 Columbia Canada 242
Ertan A 1999 Yalong (Ya-lung) China 240
Chivor ER 1957 Batá Colombia 237
By volume
name type1 date of completion river country volume (000 cubic metres)
Syncrude Tailings E N/A 4 Canada 750,000
New Cornelia Tailings E 1973 Ten Mile Wash U.S. 209,500
Tarbela ER 1977 Indus Pakistan 106,000
Fort Peck E 1937 Missouri U.S. 96,050
Lower Usuma E 1990 Usuma Nigeria 93,000
Tucurui EGR 1984 Tocantins Brazil 85,200
Ataturk ER 1990 Euphrates Turkey 84,500
Guri (Raúl Leoni) EGR 1986 Caroní Venezuela 77,971
Oahe E 1958 Missouri U.S. 66,517
Gardiner E 1968 Saskatchewan Canada 65,400
Mangla E 1967 Jhelum Pakistan 65,379
Afsluitdijk E 1932 IJsselmeer Netherlands 63,430
By size of reservoir
name type1 date of completion river country reservoir capacity (000 cubic metres)
Owen Falls G 1954 Victoria Nile Uganda 2,700,000,0005
Kakhovka EG 1955 Dnieper Ukraine 182,000,000
Kariba A 1959 Zambezi Zimbabwe-Zambia 180,600,000
Bratsk EG 1964 Angara Russia 169,270,000
Aswan High ER 1970 Nile Egypt 168,900,000
Akosombo ER 1965 Volta Ghana 153,000,000
Daniel Johnson M 1968 Manicouagan Canada 141,852,000
Guri (Raúl Leoni) EGR 1986 Caroní Venezuela 138,000,000
Krasnoyarsk G 1967 Yenisey Russia 73,300,000
W.A.C. Bennett E 1967 Peace Canada 70,309,000
Zeya B 1978 Zeya Russia 68,400,000
Cahora Bassa A 1974 Zambezi Mozambique 63,000,000
By power capacity
name type1 date of completion river country installed capacity(megawatts)
Itaipú EGR 1982 Paraná Brazil-Paraguay 12,600
Guri (Raúl Leoni) EGR 1986 Caroní Venezuela 10,300
Grand Coulee G 1941 Columbia U.S. 6,480
Sayano-Shushenskoye AG 1989 Yenisey Russia 6,400
Krasnoyarsk G 1967 Yenisey Russia 6,000
Churchill Falls E 1971 Churchill Canada 5,428
La Grande 2 R 1978 La Grande Canada 5,328
Bratsk EG 1964 Angara Russia 4,500
Ust-Ilim R 1977 Angara Russia 4,320
Tucurui EGR 1984 Tocantins Brazil 4,200
Ilha Solteira 1973 Paraná Brazil 3,200
Tarbela ER 1977 Indus Pakistan 3,478
John P. Rafferty