Emscher

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Emscher
The Emscher in northern Essen.
The Emscher in northern Essen.
Origin Eastern Ruhr Area
Mouth Rhine
Basin countries Germany
Length 84 km
Source elevation ±160 m
Avg. discharge 16 m³/s

The Emscher is a relatively small river and tributary of the Rhine, flowing through the Ruhr area in North Rhine-Westphalia in western Germany. Its total length is 84km with an average discharge near the mouth into the lower Rhine of 16 m³/s (cubic metres per second).

The Emscher has its source in Holzwickede, east of the city of Dortmund, and flows west through the Ruhr area. Towns along the Emscher include Dortmund, Castrop-Rauxel, Herne, Gelsenkirchen, Essen, Bottrop, Recklinghausen, Oberhausen and Dinslaken, where it flows into the Rhine.

In the geographical centre of a vast industrial area of 5 million inhabitants, the river is biologically dead, as it was used as an open waste water canal since the end of the 19th century. Due to the continual down river movement of soil from the mining industry, it has been impossible for the natural course of the river to be maintained, and consequently its mouth into the Rhine has been relocated north twice. A huge modern sewage treatment plant at its mouth ensures that the water of the Emscher enters the Rhine in an acceptable quality.

Since the early 1990s, a huge renaturation project for the Emscher river has been progressing. To fully rehabilitate the river, a large subterranean pipe is currently being constructed along the course of the river. The first section of the river subject to renaturation is in the city of Dortmund. The total project will cost several billion Euros and is to be finished by the year 2014.

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