Lake Kivu is one of the African Great Lakes.
It lies on the border between the Democratic
Republic of the Congo and Rwanda, and is in the Albertine Rift, the
western branch of the East African Rift.
Lake Kivu empties into the Ruzizi River, which flows
southwards into Lake
Tanganyika.
Geography
Lake
Kivu is approximately 90 km (56 mi) long and 50 km (31 mi)
at its widest. Its irregular shape makes measuring its precise surface
area difficult; it has been estimated to cover a total surface area of some
2,700 km2 (1,040 sq mi).The
surface of the lake sits at a height of 1,460 metres (4,790 ft) above sea
level. The lake has a maximum depth of 475 m (1,558 ft) and a
mean depth of 220 m (722 ft), making it the world's eighteenth deepest lake by
maximum depth, and the ninth deepest by mean depth.
Some
1,370 km2 or 58 percent of
the lake's waters lie within DRC borders.
The
lake bed sits upon a rift
valley that is slowly being pulled apart, causing volcanic activity in
the area.
The
world's tenth-largest island on a lake, Idjwi, lies in Lake Kivu, within
the boundaries of Virunga National
Park. Settlements on the lake's shore include Bukavu, Kabare, Kalehe, Sake, and Goma in Congo, and Gisenyi, Kibuye, and Cyangugu in Rwanda.
Chemistry
Lake
Kivu is a fresh water lake
and, along with Cameroonian Lake Nyos and Lake Monoun, is one of
three that undergo limnic
eruptions. Around the lake, geologists found evidence of massive biological
extinctions about every thousand years, presumably caused by outgassing events.
The trigger for lake overturns is unknown in Lake Kivu's case, but volcanic
activity is suspected. The gaseous chemical composition of exploding lakes is
unique to each lake. In Lake Kivu's case, methane and carbon
dioxide due to lake water interaction with a volcano.
The
amount of methane is estimated to be 65 cubic kilometres. If burnt over one
year, it would give an average power of about
100 gigawatts for
the whole period. There is also an estimated 256 cubic kilometers of carbon
dioxide. The water temperature is 24 °C, and the pH level is about
8.6. The methane is reported to be produced by microbial reduction of the
volcanic CO2. The risk from a
possible Lake Kivu overturn is catastrophic, dwarfing the historically
documented lake overturns at Lakes Nyos and Monoun, because approximately two
million people live in the lake basin.
Cores
from the Bukavu Bay area of the lake reveal that the bottom has layered
deposits of the rare mineral monohydrocalcite interlain
with diatoms, on top
of sapropelic sediments
with high pyrite content.
These are found at three different intervals. The sapropelic layers are
believed to be related to hydrothermal discharge and the diatoms to a bloom
which reduced the carbon dioxide levels low enough to precipitiate
monohydrocalcite.
Scientists
hypothesize that sufficient volcanic interaction with the lake's bottom water
that has high gas concentrations would heat water, force the methane out of the
water, spark a methane explosion, and trigger a nearly simultaneous release of
carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide would then suffocate large numbers of
people in the lake basin as the gases roll off the lake surface. It is also
possible that the lake could spawn lake tsunamis as
gas explodes out of it.
The
risk posed by Lake Kivu began to be understood during the analysis of more
recent events at Lake Nyos. Lake Kivu's methane was originally thought to be
merely a cheap natural resource for export, and for the generation of cheap
power. Once the mechanisms that caused lake overturns began to be understood,
so did awareness of the risk the lake posed to the local population.
An
experimental vent pipe was installed at Lake Nyos in 2001 to remove gas from
the deep water, but such a solution for the much larger Lake Kivu would be
considerably more expensive. No plan has been initiated to reduce the risk
posed by Lake Kivu. The approximately 500 million tonnes of carbon
dioxide in the lake is a
little under 2 percent of the amount released annually by human fossil
fuel burning. Therefore, the process of releasing it could potentially
have costs beyond
building and operating the system.
This
problem associated with the prevalence of methane is that of mazuku, the Swahili term
"evil wind" for the outgassing of methane and carbon dioxide that
kills people and animals, and can even kill vegetation when in high enough
concentration.
Methane extraction
Lake
Kivu has recently been found to contain approximately 55 billion cubic
metres (1.94 trillion cubic feet) of dissolved biogasat a depth of 300 metres
(1,000 ft). Until 2004, extraction of the gas was done on a small scale,
with the extracted gas being used to run boilers at the Bralirwa brewery in Gisenyi. As far as large-scale
exploitation of this resource is concerned, the Rwandan government has
negotiated with a number of parties to produce methane from the lake.
In 2011
ContourGlobal, a U.S. based energy company focused on emerging markets, secured
project financing to initiate a large-scale methane extraction project. The
project will be run through a local Rwandan entity called KivuWatt, using an
offshore barge platform to extract, separate, and clean the gasses obtained
from the lake bed before pumping purified methane via an underwater pipeline to
on-shore gas engines.
Stage one of the project aims to build and supply three "gensets"
along the lake shore, totaling 25 MW of electrical capacity. Initial project
operations are scheduled to commence in 2012.
In
addition to managing gas extraction, KivuWatt will also manage the electrical
generation plants and on-sell the electrical power to the Rwandan government
under the terms of a long-term Power Purchase Agreement (PPA). This allows
KivuWatt to control a vertically integrated energy offering from point of
extraction to point of sale into the local grid. Extraction is said to be
cost-effective and relatively simple because once the gas-rich water is pumped
up, the dissolved gases (primarily carbon dioxide, hydrogen sulphide and
methane) begin to bubble out as the water pressure gets lower. This project is
expected to increase Rwanda's energy generation capability by as much as 20
times, and will enable Rwanda to sell electricity to neighboring African countries.
The firm was awarded the 2011 Africa Power deal of the year for innovation in
the financing arrangements it obtained from various sources for the KivuWatt
project. The $200 million power plant was operating at 26 MW in 2016.
Biology
and fisheries
The
fish fauna in Lake Kivu is relatively poor with 28 described species, including
four introduced
species. The natives are the Lake Rukwa minnow (Raiamas moorii), four species of barb (Ripon barbel, Barbus altianalis, East African
red-finned barb, Enteromius.
apleurogramma, Redspot
barb, Enteromius kerstenii and Pellegrin's barb, Enteromius pellegrini), an Amphiliuscatfish,
two Clarias catfish (C. liocephalus and C. gariepinus), Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) and 15 endemic Haplochromiscichlids. Another
c. 20 possibly undescribed
species of cichlids are known from the lake. The introduced
species are three cichlids, the longfin tilapia (Oreochromis macrochir), O. leucostictus and redbreast tilapia (Coptodon rendalli), and a clupeid, the Lake Tanganyika
sardine, Limnothrissa miodon.
The
exploitable stock of the Lake Tanganyika sardine was estimated at 2000–4000
tons per year. It was introduced to Lake Kivu in the late 1959 by a
Belgian Engineer A. Collart. At present, Lake Kivu is the sole natural lake in
which L. miodon, a sardine
originally restricted to Lake Tanganyika, has been introduced initially to fill
an empty niche. Prior to the introduction, no planktivorous fish
was present in the pelagic waters of Lake Kivu. In the early 1990s, the number
of fishers on the lake was 6,563, of which 3,027 were associated with the
pelagic fishery and 3,536 with the traditional fishery. Widespread armed
conflict in the surrounding region from the mid-1990s resulted in a decline in
the fisheries harvest.
Following
this introduction, the sardine has gained substantial economic and nutritional
importance for the lakeside human population but from an ecosystem standpoint,
the introduction of planktivorous fish may result in important modifications of
plankton community structure. Recent observations showed the disappearance
during the last decades of a large grazer, Daphnia curvirostris, and the dominance of
mesozooplankton community by three species of cyclopoid copepod: Thermocyclops consimilis, Mesocyclops aequatorialis and Tropocyclops confinis.
The first comprehensive phytoplankton survey
was released in 2006. With an annual average chlorophyll a in the mixed layer
of 2.2 mg m−3 and low nutrient levels in the euphotic
zone, the lake is clearly oligotrophic. Diatoms are the dominant group in the
lake, particularly during the dry season episodes of deep mixing. During the
rainy season, the stratified water column, with high light and lower nutrient
availability, favour dominance of cyanobacteria with high numbers of
phototrophic picoplankton. The actual primary production is 0.71 g C
m−2 d−1 (≈ 260 g C m−2 a−1).
A study
of evolutionary genetics showed that the cichlids from lakes in northern
Virunga (e.g., Edward, George, Victoria) would have
evolved in a "proto-lake Kivu", much older than the intense volcanic
activity (20,000-25,000 years ago) which cut the connection. The elevation
of the mountains west of the lake (which is currently the Kahuzi-Biega
National Park, one of the largest reserves of eastern lowland (or Grauer's)
gorillas in the world), combined with the elevation of the eastern rift
(located in eastern Rwanda) would be responsible for drainage of water from
central Rwanda in the actual Lake Kivu. This concept of "proto-lake
Kivu" was challenged by lack of consistent geological evidence,although
the cichlid's molecular clock suggests the existence of a lake much older than
the commonly cited 15,000 years.
Lake
Kivu is the home of four species of freshwater crab,
including two non-endemics (Potamonautes lirrangensis and P. mutandensis) and two endemics (P. bourgaultae and P. idjwiensis).[30] Among Rift Valley lakes,
Lake Tanganyika is the only other with endemic freshwater crabs.