Drought Caused 'Historic' Global Hydropower Drop in Early 2023

Water is released from the Three Gorges Dam, a hydropower project on the Yangtze river, in central China's Hubei province, in 2020. STR / AFP/File
Water is released from the Three Gorges Dam, a hydropower project on the Yangtze river, in central China's Hubei province, in 2020. STR / AFP/File
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Drought Caused 'Historic' Global Hydropower Drop in Early 2023

Water is released from the Three Gorges Dam, a hydropower project on the Yangtze river, in central China's Hubei province, in 2020. STR / AFP/File
Water is released from the Three Gorges Dam, a hydropower project on the Yangtze river, in central China's Hubei province, in 2020. STR / AFP/File

Dry conditions, particularly in China, caused a "historic" global drop in hydropower generation in the first half of 2023, a new analysis shows, highlighting the effects of climate change.

The research by renewable energy think tank Ember argues the drop is a "warning shot that hydro output could negatively affect the speed of the electricity transition".

The group said global hydropower generation fell 8.5 percent in the year to June, more than any full-year decline over the last two decades, AFP said.

Three-quarters of that decline was the result of falls in China, which baked through record temperatures earlier this year.

Between winter 2022 and spring 2023, most areas of southwest China experienced significantly less precipitation and higher temperatures than in a normal year, according to Beijing's ministry of emergency management.

The fall in hydropower output meant global carbon emissions rose very slightly in the first half of 2023, despite a 12-percent increase in solar and wind power worldwide.

Lower growth in electricity demand helped keep the rise in emissions smaller than it might otherwise have been, Ember said in the report released Thursday.

China, however, saw its emissions rise nearly eight percent as it compensated for the loss of hydropower.

But while the extreme heat and drought conditions that caused this year's decline may have been driven by climate change, the think tank warned it remains hard to calculate future effects.

The consequences of "climate change on hydro potential are geographically varied", the group noted.

"Changes in rainfall patterns and intensity as well as increased evaporation will affect hydro output both positively and negatively depending on the region."

Some parts of central Africa, India, central Asia and northern high latitudes could see their potential to generate hydropower increase.

But in southern Europe, the southern United States and elsewhere, it is likely to weaken.

The chief of this year's COP climate meeting has called for a global tripling of renewable energy capacity by 2030.

And the International Energy Agency last month projected fossil fuel demand will peak by 2030.

But wind and solar generation grew more slowly in the first half of this year than in the same period last year, reflecting the fragility of gains in the sector.

"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," said Malgorzata Wiatros-Motyka, Ember's senior electricity analyst.

"The world is teetering at the peak of power sector emissions, and we now need to unleash the momentum for a rapid decline in fossil fuels by securing a global agreement to triple renewables capacity this decade."



Dead Sea an 'Ecological Disaster', but No One Can Agree How to Fix It

The Dead Sea has been dying for years - AFP
The Dead Sea has been dying for years - AFP
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Dead Sea an 'Ecological Disaster', but No One Can Agree How to Fix It

The Dead Sea has been dying for years - AFP
The Dead Sea has been dying for years - AFP

An abandoned lifeguard cabin, a rusty pier and mangled umbrellas are all that is left of Ein Gedi, once a spot drawing international tourists to float in the world-famous waters of the Dead Sea.

Now, this lush desert oasis at the lowest point on Earth sits in ruins beside the shrinking sea, whose highly salty waters are rapidly retreating due to industrial use and climate change, which is accelerating their natural evaporation.

The beach has been closed to the public for five years, mainly due to the appearance of dangerous sinkholes, but also because the dramatic recession of the sea's level has made it tricky to reach its therapeutic waters, known for extraordinary buoyancy that lets bathers float effortlessly.
The increasingly exposed shoreline and the sinkholes, caused by a flow of freshwater dissolving layers of salt beneath the Earth's surface, are not new.
In fact, the Dead Sea, nestled where Jordanian and Palestinian territory meet, has famously been dying for years.

Now, with war raging in the Middle East, efforts to tackle this ever-worsening ecological disaster appear to have dissolved too.

"Regional cooperation is the key... to saving the Dead Sea," said Nadav Tal, a hydrologist and water officer for the Israel office of EcoPeace, a regional environmental nonprofit that has long advocated for finding a solution.

"Because we are living in a conflict area, there is an obstacle," he said, describing how the sea has been declining more than one metre (three feet) per year since the 1960s.

- 'Ecological disaster' -

The evaporation of the salty waters in a time of rapid climate change and in a place where summer temperatures can reach upward of 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit) has been exacerbated by decades of water diversions from the sea's main source -- the Jordan River -- as well as various tributaries that begin in Lebanon and Syria.

The water is also being pumped out by local factories extracting natural minerals -- potash, bromine, sodium chloride, magnesia, magnesium chloride and metal magnesium -- to sell to markets across the world.

"The consequences of this water diversion is what we see around us," Tal told AFP, pointing to a nearby pier that was once submerged in water but now stands firmly on dry land.

"It is an ecological disaster," he emphasized.

Although some efforts have been made to address the Dead Sea disaster, including past agreements signed by Israel and Jordan, the wars raging in Gaza and beyond have brought regional tensions to an all-time high, meaning tackling cross-border environmental issues is no longer a priority for governments in the region.