Scientists sound alarm over hydropower’s impacts on tropical fish biodiversity 
By Mike Gaworecki CA Source: mongabay 1/12/2016
Mike Gaworecki
As many as 450 new hydroelectric dams are already planned or in construction on the Amazon, Congo, and Mekong rivers.
Without more careful assessment and holistic planning at the river basin level, the authors of the Science article say, species extinction and basin-wide declines in fisheries will accompany these new hydropower projects.
Past research has shown that the carbon emissions from hydroelectric dams greatly exceeds official estimates, yet hydropower is often touted as “sustainable” development.
 

The Amazon, Congo and Mekong rivers host one-third of Earth’s freshwater fish species, many of them found nowhere else — and this rich biodiversity is “being ravaged” by the development of hydroelectric dams.

The authors of an article published in the journal Science last week argue that advocates of hydropower often overestimate the economic benefits of dams and underestimate or deliberately downplay the severe impacts on biodiversity and critically important fisheries.

 
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