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Archive for 2013

The Battery of South Asia? The Potential for India-Nepal Hydropower Cooperation

Via Future Directions International, a look at potential for hydropower cooperation in south Asia: Key Points Regional leaders have appealed to Nepal to strengthen hydropower cooperation with India, to address Nepal’s domestic economic and energy crises. The close proximity and economic strength of India have made it the best candidate to boost Nepal’s hydropower potential. […]

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Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan Mull New Probe Into Nile Dam Impact

Via Reuters, an update on Ethiopia’s Renaissance dam: Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt agreed to examine the regional impact of a $4.2 billion dam being built on a Nile river tributary in Ethiopia after experts said earlier studies were inconclusive. A meeting of water ministers and delegates in Sudan’s capital, Khartoum, on Nov. 4 will discuss […]

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The Immediate Climate Threat Isn’t Rising Sea Levels, It’s Water Scarcity

Via The Atlantic, an interesting commentary on the water crisis facing the world: A girl looks up as she stands at a dried well in a village of Weining county, Guizhou province, in March 2013. More than one million people in Guizhou and Gansu provinces are facing a drinking water shortage due to two lingering […]

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The Limited Promise of Kenya’s Aquifer Discoveries

Courtesy of STRATFOR (subscription required), analysis of  Kenya’s recent discovery of several new aquifers: The recent discovery of several new aquifers in northern Kenya is welcome news for a region where much of the population does not have reliable access to drinking water and where resource scarcity has hampered economic growth. However, initial claims that […]

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The Parched Tiger: Indus Waters Treaty – An Unjustified Resentment Or Time To Bridge A River Divide?

Two very interesting articles on the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty which – while not perfect – represents the best that was possible in the circumstances that prevailed then and likely cannot be changed until India-Pakistan relations improve.  The first, via The Hindu, suggests: The Indus Water Treaty must move beyond its logic of compensation and […]

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The Thirsty Dragon: Mining In Tibet Threatens Asia’s Rivers

Via the Third Pole, a look at the impact of mining in Tibet: In his new book, Spoiling Tibet: China and Resource Nationalism on the Roof of the World, Gabriel Lafitte analyses the extent and scale of China’s mineral exploitation in Tibet. Here he talks to The Third Pole about the global environmental significance of […]

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