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Even under the most optimistic scenarios of coordinated global action to cut climate pollution, we face an era of rapid and accelerating climate change. Dams and other river infrastructure projects have been, and in most cases still are, designed based on the now obsolete assumption that future river flow patterns will be like those of the past. In reality, river flows will change significantly as temperatures increase, glaciers and snow packs melt, and rain and snow fall patterns are drastically altered.
International Rivers believes that large dams are often climate maladaptation options. This is partly because of their huge expense, which would divert funds from better options, and their slowness to be implemented. It is also because the intensification of the hydrological cycle will seriously impact the performance and safety of dams and other river infrastructure such as flood-control embankments. Scores of Southern countries are already over-dependent on streamflow-dependent hydropower. Climate adaptation will require them to diversify to other power sources or face rapidly increasing exposure to the risk of widespread power cuts and their associated economic impacts during droughts.
International Rivers 2007 Dams, Rivers and People report, Before the Deluge: Coping with Floods in a Changing Climate argues that conventional “hard path” flood control based on embankments (levees) and dams has failed and that climate adaptation requires the “soft path” of flood risk management, which aims to understand, adapt to and work with the forces of nature. LATEST ADDITIONS: Bujagali Dam Seriously Flawed, Say African Bank Inspectors Dams and Levees Heighten Flood Danger in a Warming World IPCC 2007 Report. Chapter on Freshwater Resources: Impacts, Adaptation & Vulnerability More information: Patrick McCully, "Dam Safety Concerns Grow in Wake of Failures, Changing Climate," World Rivers Review, June 2000 Patrick McCully, "Static Dams, Changing Climate," An excerpt from Silenced Rivers: The Ecology and Politics of Large Dams. "Freshwater resources and their management." Chapter in Climate Change 2007: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Greenhouse Development Rights (GDRs), a framework for an equitable global climate deal developed by think-tank EcoEquity which provides a structure for assessing national obligations to pay for both mitigation and adaptation.
CONTACT US: Patrick McCully |
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