The area where the lake now stands was once swampland. In the late 1800s Military authorities ordered a canal be dug from the Chaglinka River such that the redirected waters turned the swamp into the Lake Kopa. In 1974 work began to clean sediment from Lake Kopa, which continued intermittently until 1993. In total, approximately of sand and gravel were removed from the lake.
Location and description
Located near the foot of the Kokchetav Massif, and near the north-western part of the city of Kokshetau, the lake has an area of and an average depth of. Most of the total catchment area of, is accounted for by the tributaries of the lake: the Chaglinka river to the southwest, and the Kylshakty river to southeast. Only a very small part,, comes from the lake itself. The south and west sides of the lake are separated from the adjacent beaches by depressed areas, and along the southern and eastern coasts are sand and pebble beaches. The northern and eastern shores of the lake are low, flat, and overgrown with vegetation, meaning that the water surface of the lake is basically open only along the western and northern stretches. The lake bottom is viscous, smooth, and covered with a layer of silt clay, loam, and sand, it averages, but can reach a depth of as much as in the northern part. In 1955, the volume of water in the lake was, with a surface area of. From 1955 to 1990 the volume of the lake has decreased by and now stands at only. The lake sees amplitude fluctuations of between.
The State of the lake
In recent years the water level of the lake has fallen, leading to increased salinity, and the resultant reduction in water quality has imperilled its use as a water supply. A five year restoration project budgeted at 4,950 million tenge was announced in 2009 by Anuarbek Sagitov, head of the department of nature management. Over twenty years of images of the lake taken by NASA would be analyzed to discover the morphology of the bottom of the lake. Previously populated with unionidae, lamelliformis and other molluscs, at the end of the 1970s pollution wiped out all edible molluscs. Currently, the government conducts routine laboratory tests of the water quality of Lake Copa. Laboratory monitoring is carried out at four control points on physical, chemical, and microbiologicalproperties. According to the service Kazhydromet, the composition of the lake waters on the pollution index corresponds to "moderately polluted".