Maintenance and Repair Works: Canals
Maintenance and Repair Works: Canals
Maintenance and Repair Works: Canals
Chapter 5
5.1 INTRODUCTION
This chapter describes why and how a canal system should be maintained. The chapter also
looks at some of the most important repair works in connection with canals.
The performance of an irrigation canal system depends not only on how the system is
operated, but also on the condition of the canals. Irrigation canals function well so long as they
are kept clean and if they are not leaking. If no attention is paid to the canal system, plants may
grow and the problem of siltation may arise. Even worse, the canals may suffer from leakages.
Plant growth and sedimentation not only impede the flow in a canal, they also diminish
the area of the cross-section. As a consequence, the canal capacity may diminish (see Section
3.3). A reduction in the capacity may result in overtopping and a limit on water supply to the
fields. The available water will also be reduced when there are leakages in a canal. To protect
the system from these problems, the canals should be maintained on a regular basis.
It is not just the smaller, tertiary irrigation canals that need to be maintained, it is the
primary and secondary canals as well. Sometimes these canals may be located far from the
farmers’ fields and this can be one reason why farmers show no interest in maintaining them.
However, the smaller canals receive water from these canals and so maintenance of the larger
canals is of vital importance for the proper functioning of the whole system.
Even when a canal is well maintained, serious technical problems may arise. These
problems need to be solved by repair or improvement works. A repair should usually be done
as soon as possible, depending on the severity of the problem. Improvements, such as the
lining of a canal section, may be postponed until the end of an irrigation season, when canals
are dry and farmers have more time available.
After a serious problem is found on an inspection tour, a team of workers or farmers
should be available for repair as soon as possible. Such a team should be formed at the beginning
of the irrigation season in order to have it on call in case of emergencies. The same team may
be asked to do the improvement works. If necessary, a contractor may be asked to do the job.
A good maintenance programme can prolong the life of canals. A routine, thorough programme
should be kept to. Maintenance of an irrigation canal system is usually carried out in between
two irrigation seasons, or at times of low water demand. It consists of cleaning, weeding, de-
silting, re-shaping, and executing minor repairs.
30 Maintenance and repair works
FIGURE 29
Weeding, cleaning and de-silting
• Bushes or trees on canal embankments should be removed. They may obstruct the water
flow and their roots will open the compacted soil in the banks and cause the development of
leakages.
• Plants, silt and debris in the canal should be removed. While cleaning the canal bed, care
must be taken that the original shape of the cross-section is kept. For this, a wooden frame,
or template, with the exact dimensions of the designed cross-section of the canal being
cleaned, can be of great help (see Section 5.6.1).
• Breaches and rat holes in the embankments should be filled with compacted soil, inside as
well as outside of the embankment. For compacting, the soil should be wetted.
• Weak sections and sections of canal embankments where people or animals cross the canal
should be strengthened with compacted soil or with bricks.
FIGURE 30
Fully covered canal bed
FIGURE 31
Canal maintenance
32 Maintenance and repair works
sandy, the core should be filled with other material which contains more clay. Each layer is
wetted and the wetted soil is then compacted. Wetting the soil is conditional for good compaction,
since the aggregates in soil that is moist will disintegrate by tamping, while those in dry soil
will not. (Figure 32-C)
Step 4 Fill and compact the trench until the top is reached. (Figure 32-D)
For lined canals, the same procedure as above can be followed but with one difference:
before the bank is excavated, part of the canal lining should be removed. After filling and
compacting the earth bank, the lining should be reconstructed.
NOTE 1: Repair of a crack in the canal lining alone will not be sufficient, as the lining could
be severely undermined by the leaking water, which will quickly cause a new hole
or crack to appear in the lining.
NOTE 2: Joints between lined sections of a canal should be sealed periodically to avoid
leakages.
No explanation is necessary for the first solution, and so only the second solution, which re-
establishes the canal capacity, is described below.
The procedure to re-establish a canal capacity by rebuilding its banks is:
When it is impossible
to avoid high water levels,
an emergency outlet, or
spillway, can be installed.
An emergency outlet con-
sists of a protected lowered
section of a canal embank-
ment and a protected outlet
to the drainage system.
Such a structure will allow
water to escape into the
drainage system without
damaging the canal banks.
The level and the
length of the structure
should be such that the
excess discharge can be
safely evacuated and the
water level will not rise
higher than the highest
allowed water level (free
board level).
FIGURE 35
Emergency outlet
Figure 35 shows an emergency outlet. The water level is lower than the crest of the
emergency outlet. An engineer should be consulted for the design and the installation of an
emergency outlet.
36 Maintenance and repair works
FIGURE 39
Series of checks in a steeply sloping canal
• The limiting flow velocity of a lined canal is higher than that of an equivalent unlined
canal. Thus the canal slope can be steeper.
• Because the flow velocity in a lined canal can be higher than that in an unlined canal, the
cross-section of a lined canal can be smaller than that of an unlined canal carrying a
similar discharge.
Lining of canal sections is described in the next chapter.
40 Maintenance and repair works