Background The use of the
Aragón river has been considered since the
Middle Ages: as early as 1498 a proposal was made to the King of Aragón
Ferdinand the Catholic to divert water from the river for use as irrigation by the Council of
Tauste. In 1622 it was proposed to build a canal to
Bardenas to irrigate the lands of an abbey that was planned to be built there. In 1702 the engineer Josef Estorguia and a group of
hidalgo knights launched the proposal to divert the river so that it would run through Aragonese lands, thus avoiding the payment of tariffs and tolls to the Navarrese. 54 years later, in 1756, a project was drawn up for the construction of a canal that, rising in Tiermas, was to irrigate the Aragonese region of the
Cinco Villas. Soon after, another project was presented, this time by Captain J. A. Monroy, who proposed a canal (which was born at a similar level to the current Bardenas) that would irrigate the region of Cinco Villas and Bardenas, with a total of 15 228 ha of irrigated land, as well as the construction of 18 new urban settlements. In 1865 a company was created for the construction of an irrigation canal to go down to the Bardenas. The project was carried out by Antonio de Lesarri. The society would be in charge of the construction in exchange for the use of the water and the irrigators paying the corresponding
alfardas. In 1880 the concession was declared null and void, since the works had not begun. In 1902 a Royal Decree of 25 April proposed a National Plan of Hydraulic Works in which a hydraulic complex appeared, consisting of the Bardenas de Yesa, Foz de
Biniés,
Salvatierra, and Usún canals, each of them with a reservoir. This complex would generate an irrigated area of 30 000 ha in several towns of
Navarre and
Zaragoza. The reservoirs would be located as follows: Yesa, where the current one is located; Foz de Biniés in the waters of the
Veral river; Salvatierra, on the
Ezka River, Usún would be located in the
Salazar Valley, 6 km from
Lumbier. Along with this proposal were also those of the
Canal Imperial de Aragón and the Lodosa Canal, which made the need to dam the Aragón and its tributaries more evident. On 2 March 1909 the Ebro Hydraulic Division was commissioned to study the project for the Yesa Dam. This project was carried out by the engineers Cornelio Arellano, first, and then Manuel Abascal, who completed it in 1912. The canal project was not approved until 1917. The dam designed was a 53-meter-high gravity dam.
Project In 1923 a new project was commissioned, drafted by the engineers Félix de los Ríos, Mariano Vicente, and Antonio Colom, who carried out the study based on an irrigable area of 130 000 ha, to contribute to the
Ardisa dam with 400 000 million cubic meters per year and to supply drinking water to
Zaragoza. This proposal was included in the linking of the three large rivers on the left side of the
Ebro, the
Aragón, the
Gállego and the
Cinca. On 7 May 1926 a Royal Order approved the Yesa Dam project, making it compulsory to respect the uses and exploitations downstream of the dam. The same team that conceived the dam also planned the Bardenas canal, presenting their work on 29 December 1924. This would be approved eight years later, on 30 June 1932, by a Resolution of the General Directorate of Hydraulic Works. In 1926 it was estimated that Yesa reservoir would only be used for irrigating of the
Bardenas and the
Cinco Villas region, and its possible contribution to the Imperial Canal of Aragón was rejected. In the 1st General Plan of Works and Miscellaneous Works of the
Ebro Hydrographic Confederation, in 1926, the construction of Yesa reservoir was proposed. This would have a capacity of 470 hm³; destined for the Bardenas canal and the irrigation of the farming area of the basin itself, some 15 000 ha, although the possibility of contributing to the Imperial canal was still being discussed so that this would free up resources for the Lodosa canal. The forecasts for the Bardenas canal, which, starting from Yesa, was to reach
Ardisa, were for a dam outlet of 60 m³;/s, of which 39 would reach Ardisa.
Execution In the II Works Plan of the Confederation, which was published the following year, the works were delayed as it was considered that the studies on the regime, flow and layout of the canal and the capacity of the reservoir had not been carried out properly. That same year the Agronomic Service of the Hydrographic Confederation prepared and published a study in which it foresaw the conversion of 80 000 ha to intensive irrigation and another 30 000 ha to semi-intensive irrigation. For this purpose, it estimated that 619 952 hm³;/year of water were needed, with incidence of use in the summer months. On 13 November 1928 the foundation works for the dam, which had been put out to tender in the third Works and Works Plan, began. With respect to the Bardenas canal, it was decided to reconsider the route. In 1931 the
Yesa swamp project was carried out, which was a complement to the 1924 project. It defined the body of the dam and everything related to it, such as the outlets and intakes. By then, the problems that had arisen with the settlement of the right abutment and the doubts about the capacity of the inflows had already been solved. This project was approved on 30 June 1934. In 1933, the contract with the builders was terminated due to different problems. By that date the
Bardenas Canal was already under construction. After the
Civil War, during which the works were halted, they were resumed with the construction of the variant of the race in 1940 and the excavation of the right slope. In 1945, under the direction of René Petit, two reforms of the project were carried out, the first one was approved by Ministerial Order on February 6 and the second and definitive one on September 15. The uses to be given to the Yesa water were definitively designated, which were the same as those foreseen in the Félix de los Ríos project, but the irrigable surface area was reduced to 110,000 hectares. The reservoir was inaugurated in 1959 and in 1960 came into service. The closure of the gates of the Yesa dam caused the abandonment of several villages,
Ruesta, Tiermas, and
Escó, with an affected population of more than 1500 people and flooded the valley leaving 2400 ha of arable land under water, of which 1000 were of excellent quality. The 8528 ha that were expropriated in the affected municipalities were distributed among the municipalities of
Sigüés, with 3752;
Urriés, with 1498 ha,
Undués de Lerda, with 1754 ha and
Los Pintanos, with 1524 ha, the latter belonging to the Cinco Villas region. A collateral effect was the purchase by the Patrimonio Forestal del Estado of the
valley of La Garcipollera, which leads to
Castiello de Jaca, by means of a decree of forced repopulation to plant
laricio pine to prevent erosion and silting of the reservoir. This led to the abandonment of the villages of
Larrosa,
Villanovilla,
Bescós de Garcipollera,
Bergosa,
Acín de Garcipollera,
Cenarbe, and
Yosa de Garcipollera. == Yesa's heightening ==