Asking: How can we better include gender into our work? NHI is now embarked on an implementation and dissemination phase to share the analytic methods and substantive results achieved in the Mekong context to propagate in other basins around the world that are facing similar threats. The results show that this alternative would be comparable or superior to new hydro with respect to net economic benefits, reliability of power, timeline for deployment, and avoidance of financial risks.

Where expert views diverge, conclusions are cautiously formulated. Conducted in full cooperation with the GoL, the Master Plan prepared by NHI presents an alternative development scenario that satisfies proposed sustainability criteria, and is based on sites that are not accessible to migratory fish because they are above existing barriers (already constructed dams in the Xe Kaman tributary) or so far up in the catchment that the fish visitations are relatively minor. The guide is designed to be adjusted, added to and altered for different audiences. International Rivers protects rivers and defends the rights of communities that depend on them. Transforming Power, a gender guide for organizations campaigning on dams and for rivers was created as a tool to help Civil Society Organizations (CSO’s), Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO’s) and grassroots community organizations strengthen their gender practice and encourage campaigning in ways that are gender-responsive in the interests of both women and men. Activist Guides to Sinohydro’s Environment and Social Policies, PacificCorp must accept responsibility for removing its dams, Chinese-built dam projects failing on environmental standards, green group International Rivers warns, PRESS RELEASE | South Africa and DRC plan to press ahead with Inga 3 in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, JOINT STATEMENT | One year after Xe Pian-Xe Namnoy dam collapse, civil society from Korea and the Mekong call for immediate accountability and redress. Provides information on the gendered impacts of dams.

In too many cases, local communities shoulder the financial burdens and social and environmental impacts while the developers walk away with a profit. The gender guide consists of four sections and an appendix with tools and resources. Large dams are being planned and developed on major rivers like the Mekong, the Amazon, and the Congo, where millions depend directly on their rivers for food and livelihoods. These alternative projects would be designed and operated to allow flushing of sediments and to maintain a flow pattern conducive to the needs of the migratory fish.

website by duckdog design International Rivers protects rivers and defends the rights of communities that depend on them.

Furthermore, dams lower the climate resilience of riverine communities. It is evident that instead of focusing on building new dams, we need to attend to underperformance of existing projects.

And in an era of climate change, hydropower is a risky and insecure energy source that’s deeply vulnerable to increasingly severe droughts and floods. (2019), Gender Responsive Campaign Planning Checklist. If these concepts are implemented by the power companies and national governments, these would constitute the two largest utility scale floating solar-hydro hybrid projects in the world, and could serve as a model for widespread adoption. As Marc Reisner cataloged so forcefully in the book Cadillac Desert, dam builders pursued these mega-projects with little regard for whether they were needed, or what effects they would have on people or the environment. Appendix 10: Gender responsive campaign planning checklist. On the basis of the results of that study, the present advice has been developed. This is madness. Appendix 6: Understand who has access to and control of resources within the household and the community.

Subscribe to emails and follow International Rivers on social media to get the latest news and actions. Transforming Power, a gender guide for organizations campaigning on dams and for rivers was created as a tool to help Civil Society Organizations (CSO’s), Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO’s) and grassroots community organizations strengthen their gender practice and encourage campaigning in ways that are gender-responsive in the interests of both women and men. Indeed, the goal of being fully 'sustainable' will remain aspirational in value. A "sustainable livelihood" is defined by Development Alternatives as the ability of an individual/family to meet their basic needs in a manner that is dignified but does not undermine the natural resource base. To keep development sustainable in the long run, we need thorough … Large dams are being planned and developed on major rivers like the Mekong, the Amazon, and the Congo, where millions depend directly on their rivers for food and livelihoods. (415) 693-3000 Instead, the challenge of defining sustainable development in practical terms must require a much deeper inquiry into each development sector.

The engineering of dams and reservoirs to relocate vast amounts of water for the generation of hydroelectricity or to enable irrigated agriculture, for example, is considered a water transfer.