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posted by chromas on Tuesday November 06 2018, @11:45PM   Printer-friendly
from the dam-nation dept.

Large hydropower dams 'not sustainable' in the developing world

A new study says that many large scale hydropower projects in Europe and the US have been disastrous for the environment. Dozens of these dams are being removed every year, with many considered dangerous and uneconomic. But the authors fear that the unsustainable nature of these projects has not been recognised in the developing world. Thousands of new dams are now being planned for rivers in Africa and Asia.

[...] Dams are now being removed at a rate of more than one a week on both sides of the Atlantic. The problem, say the authors of this new paper [open, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1809426115] [DX], is that governments were blindsided by the prospect of cheap electricity without taking into account the full environmental and social costs of these installations. More than 90% of dams built since the 1930s were more expensive than anticipated. They have damaged river ecology, displaced millions of people and have contributed to climate change by releasing greenhouse gases from the decomposition of flooded lands and forests.

[...] In the developing world, an estimated 3,700 dams, large and small are now in various stages of development. The authors say their big worry is that many of the bigger projects will do irreparable damage to the major rivers on which they are likely to be built. On the Congo river, the Grand Inga project is expected to produce more than a third of the total electricity currently being generated in Africa. However, the new study points out that the main goal for the $80bn installation will be to provide electricity to industry. "Over 90% of the energy from this project is going to go to South Africa for mining and the people in the Congo will not get that power," said Prof Moran.


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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by edIII on Wednesday November 07 2018, @06:29AM

    by edIII (791) on Wednesday November 07 2018, @06:29AM (#758856)

    I just laughed really fucking hard thinking about taking down Hoover Dam. It's done, it's over, it's never going anywhere. Draining it would be something that could literally take years at full effort, and may not be possible without catastrophic failure. I know they accounted for the weight of the water against the wall. When that weight disappears, I don't know how the dam will react. They're claims of greenhouse gases are bullshit with Hoover Dam, as the local ecology was not dense as as forest. It's a fucking desert.

    Ohhh, and people in Las Vegas don't want to pay out the ass for water from another state, or dig an aqueduct from northern Nevada. That's also our water supply.

    Fucking morons indeed.

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