Loading...
The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) has warned that the hydrological cycle is increasingly out of balance due to climate change. In a call for a fundamental policy shift, the WMO emphasized the need for better monitoring to address this issue. The organization's concerns highlight the impact of climate change on global water cycles and the urgent need for action. This call comes as hydro dams struggle to handle the intensifying weather conditions caused by climate change.
Hydro Dams Are Struggling To Handle the World's Intensifying Weather https://t.co/ozdqENxnDe
In #developing countries where dam building continues, the pace is slowing down, and other sources of #renewableenergy like solar, are monopolising #policy attention and #investment, mention Lydia Powell, Akhilesh Sati & Vinod Kumar Tomar https://t.co/aiPBQpkJjO
Hydro dams are struggling to handle the world’s intensifying weather https://t.co/lBX44wo8SN
Large storage hydro-power projects produce low carbon electricity, but they also impose huge environmental and social costs, write Lydia Powell, Akhilesh Sati & Vinod Kumar Tomar https://t.co/aiPBQpkJjO
How climate change is impacting hydroelectricity https://t.co/GktNSo05HL
GLOBAL WATER CYCLE 'SPINNING OUT OF BALANCE': UN METEOROLOGICAL AGENCY (Reuters) 🧐 The World Meteorological Organization said that the hydrological cycle was out of balance due to climate change and made a call for a fundamental policy shift towards better monitoring. https://t.co/YSJieRkxXp
Global water cycles are 'spinning out of balance' due to climate change, the World Meteorological Organization says https://t.co/EWpZaAoZ3q https://t.co/QT8mhz8HxE
The World Meteorological Organization said that the hydrological cycle was increasingly out of balance due to climate change and made a call for a fundamental policy shift towards better monitoring https://t.co/XlZIWzX73P
The World Meteorological Organization said that the hydrological cycle is increasingly out of balance due to climate change and made a call for a fundamental policy shift towards better monitoring https://t.co/EWpZaAordS https://t.co/ZQKlEHOdt2
Climate change is robbing some hydro dams of water while oversupplying others—forcing managers to employ new forecasting technology and clever strategies to capitalize on what they have. https://t.co/fb76KLvHzn
If the #energy needs of the future #population are to be met, #India must reduce its dependence on non-renewable #resources and become self-reliant in the production of #greenenergy, explains Rumi Aijaz https://t.co/KLgC7x6bB1
🌀 GLOBAL WATER CYCLE 'SPINNING OUT OF BALANCE': UN METEOROLOGICAL AGENCY Full Story → https://t.co/pOj2yQYSG2 The World Meteorological Organization said on Thursday that the hydrological cycle was increasingly out of balance due to climate change and made a call for a… https://t.co/c0FMX4jGGU https://t.co/wcpEE0pdkc
Global water cycles are ‘spinning out of balance’, weather agency reports https://t.co/y6TM67Tcnb
Historically low water levels have affected hundreds of thousands of people and wildlife across Brazil’s Amazon. With experts predicting the drought could last until early 2024, the problems stand to intensify. https://t.co/JLdPxVN1vQ
Drought caused 'historic' global hydropower drop of 8.5% in early 2023 "While it is encouraging to see the remarkable growth of wind and solar energy, we can't ignore the stark reality of adverse hydro conditions intensified by climate change" https://t.co/ZlZK1AoRiN