
Dead trees in Balbina Reservoir, Brazil. (Pedro Ivo Simoes)
River-wrecking dams are the wrong choice for a warming world. International Rivers works on three key areas where climate change, dams and rivers intersect:
Dams as climate polluters
Scientific studies indicate that dams and reservoirs are globally significant sources of the greenhouse gases carbon dioxide and, in particular, methane. The latest estimate published in a peer-review journal is that dams and reservoirs are responsible for almost a quarter of all human-caused methane emissions. This 104 million tonnes of dam methane equals 4-5% of all human-caused warming.
Stopping international carbon offsetting scams
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is the Kyoto Protocol’s main carbon offsetting program. It is intended to lower developed countries’ costs of reducing their greenhouse gas emissions through the purchase of "carbon credits" from projects in developing countries. It is also supposed to promote “sustainable development.” The CDM is failing badly on both counts. International Rivers seeks to prevent big hydro developers from exploiting the CDM’s flaws, to fix the CDM's worst loopholes, and to promote better mechanisms for supporting decarbonization.
Adapting to a warming world
Some of the worst impacts of global warming on both people and ecosystems will be felt though its impacts on water. Some areas will become much drier, some wetter. More extreme floods will threaten the safety of dams, and unprecedented droughts will drastically reduce the hydropower and water supply services that dams are built to provide. Minimizing the impacts of climate change will require diversifying away from dependence on big dams for electricity generation and flood control. Water security in a warming world will require major improvements in water use efficiency and in techniques such as rainwater harvesting and improved groundwater management and use.
LATEST ADDITIONS:
UN CDM Executive Board Holds Project Auditors Accountable
Rip-Offsets: The Failure of the Kyoto Protocol's Clean Development Mechanism
Global Warming Glossary
Amazon Powers Major Carbon Sink
Bujagali Dam Seriously Flawed, Say African Bank Inspectors
CONTACT US:
Patrick McCully
patrick [at] internationalrivers [dot] org
+1 510 848 1155