Farewell by Valentyn Altanets, 1978

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Farewell by Valentyn Altanets, 1978
Watermelons from Kherson at river port of Kiev, Ukrainian, 1958.
Two years after the Nova Kakhovka dam was destroyed in Ukraine, nature has returned in abundance to the drained land in a ‘big natural exper
At the southern tip of Europe’s largest river island, the ground falls away into a vast and unexpected vista. From a high, rocky ledge on Khortytsia Island, the view opens on to a sea of swaying young willows and mirrored lagoons. Some of the trees are already many metres tall, but this is a young forest. Just a few years ago, all of it was under water.“
This is Velykyi Luh – the Great Meadow,” says Valeriy Babko, a retired history teacher and army veteran, standing on the former reservoir shoreline at Malokaterynivka village. For him, this extraordinary new-old environment represents more than nature alone.
“It is an ancient, mythic terrain, woven through Ukrainian folklore,” he says. “Think of all those Cossacks galloping through its valleys of forests so dense the sun barely pierced them.”
That historic landscape vanished in 1956, when the Soviet Union completed the Kakhovka dam and hydroelectric power plant and flooded the entire region. What had once been an ecological and cultural cradle became a reservoir, and its rich, living systems were entombed beneath the water.
Then, in 2023, that water was unleashed as weapon: the on the Dnipro River, under the control of Russian forces, was blown up (Russia denies bombing it). It sent a vast, destructive flood of water and sediment downstream, destroying villages and killing an unknown number of people; figures for the death toll range from a few dozen into the hundreds. Up to one million people lost access to drinking water. Two years on from the disaster, the reservoir’s future still hangs in the balance. Scientists say it represents both a “return to life” for the ecosystem and wild creatures that inhabit it – and an unpredictable, potentially toxic “timebomb”. It is a case study in the complexity of how nature responds to vast changes wrought by humankind – and what happens to ecosystems in the wake of disaster.
In the immediate aftermath of the bombing, Kakhovka reservoir resembled a desert of drying mud and cracked silt. Now, plants grow so thickly you must scythe through the vegetation covering the earth embankment before the basin comes fully into view.
The bone-dry former shoreline is studded with husks and shells of aquatic organisms that once lived here. Beyond it, a vast sea of young trees stretches over the horizon towards the occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station. The size of it is difficult to take in: the reservoir’s surface area was 2,155 sq km (832 sq miles) – bigger than New York City and its five boroughs.
The latest report from the Ukrainian War Environmental Consequences Work Group (UWEC) confirms what satellite images, ecologists and field researchers began to observe over the past two years: the ecosystem of the lower Dnipro is not only recovering, it is evolving. The drained reservoir is now home to dense growths of willow and poplar and enormous wetlands; endangered sturgeon have returned to waterways; wild boar and mammals to the forests; and there are signs of spontaneous regeneration across a huge stretch of floodplain.
“Prior to the dam, the Dnipro floodplain here hosted huge oak forests and many types of wetlands over thousands of square kilometers, creating a mosaic of biodiversity-rich habitats for hundreds of bird species and gigantic fish such as the Ukrainian sturgeon, which used to come here to spawn,” [Eugene Simonov, international coordinator at Rivers without Boundaries] says.
The Great Meadow, he says, also represents an opportunity for Ukraine as it seeks to attract global funds for postwar recovery and join the EU. “Restoring natural freshwater ecosystems along a 250-km stretch of the lower Dnipro could be the largest project of its kind in Europe and has the potential to become Ukraine’s decisive contribution to meeting EU commitments to restore rivers to their natural state by 2030,” he says.
Yet, as scientists are quick to emphasise, this recovery is not guaranteed. Much of the former reservoir remains inaccessible due to active shelling and mined terrain. Comprehensive biological monitoring is difficult. Heavy metals and chemical contamination are a growing concern for researchers. And the future of the area remains politically uncertain.
While the reservoir forest looks like an oasis, sprung up in the absence of people, it is still marked by the residue of human enterprise. Over time, the banks of the reservoir eroded. Their fine particles of dust sank into a thick layer at the basin’s floor. At the same time, pollutants were entering the water – particularly heavy metals from industrial enterprises along and upstream of the reservoir.
When the dam was drained it sent an enormous quantity of polluted, potentially toxic waste flowing into the wider area. Its heavy metals could easily contaminate water sources, soil, and be taken up by plants. Even in small concentrations, they can “have negative effects on various systems of human organisms; for example, they can cause cancer, endocrine disruptions, problems with lungs, with kidneys,” [Oleksandra Shumilova, a freshwater ecologist] says. She compares their effects to radiation: as those toxins move up the food chain, they can concentrate, causing particular problems for bigger animals and meat eaters.
A 2025 report co-authored by Shumilova and published in the journal Science concluded that the pollutants represented a “toxic timebomb”, and warned of significant concerns for animal food webs and human populations living in the area. But, as in other environments – such as the site of the Chornobyl nuclear disaster – contamination and natural regeneration can occur side by side. In the same paper, the scientists concluded that within five years, 80% of the ecosystem functions lost to the dam’s presence will be restored and that the floodplain’s biodiversity would recover significantly within two years.
The UWEC report frames this moment as a strategic turning point for Ukraine’s environmental and cultural policy. If left to regenerate, the site could become one of Europe’s largest contiguous freshwater ecosystems, rivalling even the Danube delta in ecological importance. But the emerging forest at Kakhovka could disappear as quickly as it emerged.
The state energy company Ukrhydroenergo has already signalled its intention to reconstruct the Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant. For some officials, this represents a return to “normality”: a reinstatement of industrial productivity, energy security and geopolitical control.
“Rebuilding the dam the way it was would not be a recovery,” says Vasyliuk, “it would be an ecocide. It would destroy a young, spontaneous forest before we even have a chance to understand it.”
The decision holds significance beyond Ukraine’s borders. Roughly 80% of the territory affected by the reservoir’s collapse lies within nationally and internationally protected zones, many of them part of Europe’s Emerald Network, placing the fate of Velykyi Luh within a larger continental mandate to safeguard ecological and cultural heritage.
From a climate perspective, the newly forming ecosystem offers significant potential for carbon capture and storage, the 2025 UWEC report concludes.
“This is an opportunity we cannot afford to miss,” says Simonov. “If Ukraine chooses to protect Velykyi Luh, it won’t just be saving a landscape, it will be choosing to believe in its own future.”
[Oleksiy Vasyliuk, co-author of a 2025 report on the reservoir for the UWEC and head of the Ukrainian Nature Conservation Group] adds: “This is our biocultural sovereignty at stake and that means our nature, our identity, our independence, and a symbol of the kind of nation we want to become.”
“From a human point of view it was, of course, a disaster for people living there. But from a scientific point of view, it’s a very rare event: how an ecosystem [can be] re-established. It is a big natural experiment. And it is still ongoing.” [says Shumilova]
🌊 Сьогодні Міжнародний день Дніпра. На відео саме те місце, де починалось Хрещення Русі – хвилі могутньої річки плещуть так само, як і тисячі років тому. Однак, якщо ми продовжимо ставитись до своїх річок недбало, Дніпро також може стати тоненькою цівкою води, як Либідь, по якій колись ходили кораблі, а тепер її можна перестрибнути неначе канаву. Стратегія відновлення водних ресурсів, модернізація очисних споруд та європейські стандарти. Подробиці👇
Щороку в першу суботу липня відзначають Міжнародний день Дніпра. Проблеми забруднення, наслідки бойових дій та шляхи екологічного відновленн
📹: GreenPost
Ivan Marchuk (Ukrainian/Soviet, b.1936)
The sun rose over the Dnipro, 2003
Acrylic paint on canvas Pliontanism @ Wikimedia Commons
Kyiv, Ukraine. 1967.
Oil on canvas painting “Young Shevchenko in Kanev”, size 110х160 cm, by artist Nina Volkova (1917-1993), artwork from the collection of Kobzar Art Gallery
dnipro river/kyiv, ukraine