Hydropower dams produce huge impacts on renewable energy production, water resources, and economic development, particularly in the Global South, where accelerated dam construction has made it a global hotspot. We do not fully understand the multiple impacts that dams have in the nearby areas from a global perspective, including the spatial differentiations. In this study, we examined the impacts of hydropower dam construction in nearby areas. We first found that more than one-third of global gross domestic production (GDP) and almost one-third of global population fall within 50 km of the world's 7,155 hydropower dams (<10% of the global land area sans the Antarctic). We further analyzed impacts of 631 hydropower dams (≥1-megawatt capacity) constructed since 2001 and commissioned before 2015 for their effects on economy, population, and environment in nearby areas and examined the results in five regions (i.e., Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, and South America) and by different dam sizes. We found that recently constructed dams were associated with increased GDP in North America and urban areas in Europe but with decreased GDP, urban land, and population in the Global South and greenness in Africa in nearby areas. Globally, these dams were linked with reduced economic production, population, and greenness of areas within 50 km of the dams. While large dams were related with reduced GDP and greenness significantly, small and medium dams were coupled with lowered population and urban land substantially, and large and medium dams were connected to diminished nighttime light noticeably in nearby areas.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2108038119 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
January 2025
School of Civil Engineering, Shijiazhuang Tiedao University, Shijiazhuang, 050043, China.
Hydrological forecasting is of great significance to regional water resources management and reservoir operation. Climate change has increased the complexity and difficulty of hydrological forecasting. In this study, a hybrid explainable streamflow forecasting model based on CNN-LSTM-Attention was established for five typical river source regions in the eastern Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (EQTP).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
November 2024
China Institute of Water Resources and Hydropower Research, Beijing 100038, China.
Concrete stress is a key factor influencing the operational safety of concrete dams, and understanding the true distribution and variation of stress is a major research focus in the field of dam engineering. In the heel region of the dam, internal voids in the concrete may allow external water infiltration under high hydraulic head, leading to changes in the concrete's elastic modulus and Biot coefficient. These changes, in turn, affect the effective stress experienced by the concrete.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Manage
December 2024
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research - NINA, NO-7485, Trondheim, Norway.
Small-scale hydropower plants with an installed capacity <10 MW are an important part of Norway's local and regional development. Small-scale facilities have been viewed as a relatively environmentally friendly form of energy production because they are assumed to have limited negative environmental impact. However, the plants potentially have environmental impacts related to land use changes from infrastructure installation and also instream effects such as barriers to fish migration or disturbed flow conditions within bypasses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
December 2024
Institute of International Rivers and Eco-Security, Yunnan University, Kunming 650500, China.
The construction of river dams disrupts river continuity and sediment transport, altering the riverbed between sediment "sources" and "sinks" and changing the sediment characteristics of the river. In this study, 256 sediment samples from 54 major control cross-sections of the Lancang River (LCR) were analyzed to examine the spatial and temporal distribution of clay and non-clay minerals in the sediment and their relationship with the environmental changes caused by the construction 11 hydropower plants. The results indicate that the construction of terrace dams on the LCR interrupted the downstream refinement trend of sediments, which reappeared once the terrace reservoirs stabilized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeliyon
November 2024
Department of Geographical Sciences, Environment and Population, Bujumbura, Burundi University, Bujumbura P.O. Box 5142, Burundi.
Hydropower serves as a very important element of the power system all over the world. And it has positive impacts on both economic development and on slowing down climate change related events such as floods and hydropower do not directly emit greenhouse gas which are ones of the main challenges facing humanity in the world. However, apart from its advantages, there are also various disadvantages of hydropower mainly related to its impacts on natural environment.
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