Rivers
River Systems
The rivers of Bangladesh mark both
the physiography of the nation and the life of the people. About
700 in number, these rivers generally flow south. The larger rivers
serve as the main source of water for cultivation and as the
principal arteries of commercial transportation. Rivers also
provide fish, an important source of protein. Flooding of the
rivers during the monsoon season causes enormous hardship and
hinders development, but fresh deposits of rich silt replenish the
fertile but overworked soil. The rivers also drain excess monsoon
rainfall into the Bay of Bengal. Thus, the great river system is at
the same time the country's principal resource and its greatest
hazard.
| The profusion of rivers can be
divided into five major networks. |
1 Jamuna-Brahmaputra 2 Padma-Ganges 3 Surma-Meghna 4 Padma-Meghna 5 Karnaphuli. |
The profusion of rivers can be
divided into five major networks. The Jamuna-Brahmaputra is 292
kilometers long and extends from northern Bangladesh to its
confluence with the Padma. Originating as the Yarlung Zangbo Jiang
in China's Xizang Autonomous Region (Tibet) and flowing through
India's state of Arunachal Pradesh, where it becomes known as the
Brahmaputra ("Son of Brahma"), it receives waters from five major
tributaries that total some 740 kilometers in length. At the point
where the Brahmaputra meets the Tista River in Bangladesh, it
becomes known as the Jamuna. The Jamuna is notorious for its
shifting subchannels and for the formation of fertile silt islands
(chars). No permanent settlements can exist along its banks.
The second system is the
Padma-Ganges, which is divided into two sections: a 258-kilometer
segment, the Ganges, which extends from the western border with
India to its confluence with the Jamuna some 72 kilometers west of
Dhaka, and a 126-kilometer segment, the Padma, which runs from the
Ganges-Jamuna confluence to where it joins the Meghna River at
Chandpur. The Padma-Ganges is the central part of a deltaic river
system with hundreds of rivers and streams--some 2,100 kilometers
in length--flowing generally east or west into the
Padma.
The third network is the
Surma-Meghna system, which courses from the northeastern border
with India to Chandpur, where it joins the Padma. The Surma-Meghna,
at 669 kilometers by itself the longest river in Bangladesh, is
formed by the union of six lesser rivers. Below the city of Kalipur
it is known as the Meghna. When the Padma and Meghna join together,
they form the fourth river system--the Padma-Meghna--which flows
145 kilometers to the Bay of Bengal.
This mighty network of four river
systems flowing through the Bangladesh Plain drains an area of some
1.5 million square kilometers. The numerous channels of the
Padma-Meghna, its distributaries, and smaller parallel rivers that
flow into the Bay of Bengal are referred to as the Mouths of the
Ganges. Like the Jamuna, the Padma-Meghna and other estuaries on
the Bay of Bengal are also known for their many
chars.
A fifth river system, unconnected
to the other four, is the Karnaphuli. Flowing through the region of
Chittagong and the Chittagong Hills, it cuts across the hills and
runs rapidly downhill to the west and southwest and then to the
sea. The Feni, Karnaphuli, Sangu, and Matamuhari--an aggregate of
some 420 kilometers--are the main rivers in the region. The port of
Chittagong is situated on the banks of the Karnaphuli. The
Karnaphuli Reservoir and Karnaphuli Dam are located in this area.
The dam impounds the Karnaphuli River's waters in the reservoir for
the generation of hydroelectric power.
During the annual monsoon period,
the rivers of Bangladesh flow at about 140,000 cubic meters per
second, but during the dry period they diminish to 7,000 cubic
meters per second. Because water is so vital to agriculture, more
than 60 percent of the net arable land, some 9.1 million hectares,
is cultivated in the rainy season despite the possibility of severe
flooding, and nearly 40 percent of the land is cultivated during
the dry winter months. Water resources development has responded to
this "dual water regime" by providing flood protection, drainage to
prevent overflooding and waterlogging, and irrigation facilities
for the expansion of winter cultivation. Major water control
projects have been developed by the national government to provide
irrigation, flood control, drainage facilities, aids to river
navigation and road construction, and hydroelectric power. In
addition, thousands of tube wells and electric pumps are used for
local irrigation. Despite severe resource constraints, the
government of Bangladesh has made it a policy to try to bring
additional areas under irrigation without salinity
intrusion.
Water resources management,
including gravity flow irrigation, flood control, and drainage,
were largely the responsibility of the Bangladesh Water Development
Board. Other public sector institutions, such as the Bangladesh
Krishi Bank, the Bangladesh Rural Development Board, the Bangladesh
Bank, and the Bangladesh Agricultural Development Corporation were
also responsible for promotion and development of minor irrigation
works in the private sector through government credit
mechanisms.
| River | Length
(km) | Area covered (old districts) in
km |
| Arial
Khan | 160 | Faridpur (102) Barisal
(58) |
| Bangshi | 238 | Mymensingh (198) Dhaka
(40) |
| Betna-Kholpotua | 191 | Jessore (103) Khulna
(88) |
| Bhadra | 193 | Jessore (58) Khulna
(135) |
| Bhairab | 250 | Jessore,
Khulna |
| Bhogai-Kangsa | 225 | Mymensingh
(225) |
| Brahmaputra-Jamuna
(Jamuna 207) | 276 | Rangpur (140) Pabna
(136) |
| Buriganga |
27 | Dhaka (27) |
| Chitra | 170 | Kushtia (19) Jessore
(151) |
| Dakatia | 207 | Comilla (180) Noakhali
(27) |
| Dhaleshwari | 160 | Mymensingh,
Dhaka |
| Dhanu-Baulai-Ghorautra | 235 | Mymensingh (126)
Sylhet (109) |
| Donai-Charalkata-Jamuneshwari-Karatoya
| 450 | Rangpur (193), Bogra
(157), Pabna (100) |
| Ganges-Padma (Ganges
258, Padma 120) | 378 | Rajshahi (145), Pabna
(98), Dhaka and Faridpur (135) |
| Gorai-Madhumati-Baleshwar | 371 | Kushtia (37), Faridpur
(71), Jessore (92), Khulna (104), Barisal
(67) |
| Ghaghat | 236 | Rangpur
(236) |
| Karatoya-Atrai-Gur-Gumani-Hurasagar
| 597 | Dinajpur (259),
Rajshahi (258), Pabna (80) |
| Karnafuli | 180 | Chittagong HT,
Chittagong |
| Kobadak | 260 | Jessore (80) Khulna
(180) |
| Kumar | 162 | Jessore,
Faridpur |
| Kushiyara | 228 | Sylhet
(228) |
| Little
Feni-Dakatia | 195 | Noakhali (95) Comilla
(100) |
| Lower
Meghna | 160 | from Chandpur to the
Bay of Bengal |
| Matamuhuri | 287 | Chittagong HT and
Chittagong |
| Mathabhanga | 156 | Rajshahi (16), Kushtia
(140) |
| Nabaganga | 230 | Kushtia (26) Jessore
(204) |
| Old
Brahmaputra | 276 | Mymensingh
(276) |
| Punarbhaba | 160 | Dinajpur (80) Rajshahi
(80) |
| Rupsa-Pasur | 141 | Khulna
(141) |
| Sangu | 173 | Chittagong (80),
Chittagong Hill Tracts (93) |
| Surma-Meghna | 670 | Sylhet (290), Comilla
(235), Barisal (145) |
| Tista | 115 | Rangpur
(115) |