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Global Dam Watch: curated data and tools for management and decision making

Mark Mulligan, Bernhard Lehner, Christiane Zarfl, Michele Thieme, Penny Beames, Arnout van Soesbergen, Jonathan Higgins, Stephanie Januchowski-Hartley, Kate A Brauman, Luca De Felice, Qingke Wen, Carlos Garcia De Leaniz Orcid Logo, Barbara Belletti, Lisa Mandle, Xiao Yang, Jida Wang, Nick Mazany-Wright

Environmental Research: Infrastructure and Sustainability, Volume: 1, Issue: 3, Start page: 033003

Swansea University Authors: Stephanie Januchowski-Hartley, Carlos Garcia De Leaniz Orcid Logo

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Abstract

Dams, reservoirs, and other water management infrastructure provide benefits, but can also have negative impacts. Dam construction and removal affects progress toward the UN sustainable development goals at local to global scales. Yet, globally-consistent information on the location and characterist...

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Published in: Environmental Research: Infrastructure and Sustainability
ISSN: 2634-4505
Published: IOP Publishing 2021
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa58855
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Here we introduce the Global Dam Watch (GDW) initiative (www.globaldamwatch.org ) whose objectives are: (a) advancing recent efforts to develop a single, globally consistent dam and instream barrier data product for global-scale analyses (the GDW database); (b) bringing together the increasingly numerous global, regional and local dam and instream barrier datasets in a directory of databases (the GDW directory); (c) building tools for the visualisation of dam and instream barrier data and for analyses in support of policy and decision making (the GDW knowledge-base) and (d) advancing earth observation and geographical information system techniques to map a wider range of instream structures and their properties. Our focus is on all types of anthropogenic instream barriers, though we have started by prioritizing major reservoir dams and run-of-river barriers, for which more information is available. 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spelling 2022-10-10T11:28:35.5650645 v2 58855 2021-11-30 Global Dam Watch: curated data and tools for management and decision making b634c6a9429ed84ced10e9033d27659d Stephanie Januchowski-Hartley Stephanie Januchowski-Hartley true false 1c70acd0fd64edb0856b7cf34393ab02 0000-0003-1650-2729 Carlos Garcia De Leaniz Carlos Garcia De Leaniz true false 2021-11-30 FGSEN Dams, reservoirs, and other water management infrastructure provide benefits, but can also have negative impacts. Dam construction and removal affects progress toward the UN sustainable development goals at local to global scales. Yet, globally-consistent information on the location and characteristics of these structures are lacking, with information often highly localised, fragmented, or inaccessible. A freely available, curated, consistent, and regularly updated global database of existing dams and other instream infrastructure is needed along with open access tools to support research, decision-making and management needs. Here we introduce the Global Dam Watch (GDW) initiative (www.globaldamwatch.org ) whose objectives are: (a) advancing recent efforts to develop a single, globally consistent dam and instream barrier data product for global-scale analyses (the GDW database); (b) bringing together the increasingly numerous global, regional and local dam and instream barrier datasets in a directory of databases (the GDW directory); (c) building tools for the visualisation of dam and instream barrier data and for analyses in support of policy and decision making (the GDW knowledge-base) and (d) advancing earth observation and geographical information system techniques to map a wider range of instream structures and their properties. Our focus is on all types of anthropogenic instream barriers, though we have started by prioritizing major reservoir dams and run-of-river barriers, for which more information is available. Our goal is to facilitate national-scale, basin-scale and global-scale mapping, analyses and understanding of all instream barriers, their impacts and their role in sustainable development through the provision of publicly accessible information and tools. We invite input and partnerships across sectors to strengthen GDW’s utility and relevance for all, help define database content and knowledge-base tools, and generally expand the reach of GDW as a global hub of impartial academic expertise and policy information regarding dams and other instream barriers. Journal Article Environmental Research: Infrastructure and Sustainability 1 3 033003 IOP Publishing 2634-4505 global, dam, data, tools 23 11 2021 2021-11-23 10.1088/2634-4505/ac333a COLLEGE NANME Science and Engineering - Faculty COLLEGE CODE FGSEN Swansea University Another institution paid the OA fee WWF International Grant: WWF Innovation Fund Identifier: doi https://doi.org/10.13039/501100005201 National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center Grant: DBI-1639145 Identifier: doi https://doi.org/10.13039/100014262 European Regional Development Fund Grant: 80761-SU-140 Identifier: doi https://doi.org/10.13039/501100008530 2022-10-10T11:28:35.5650645 2021-11-30T16:38:18.0297584 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Biosciences Mark Mulligan 1 Bernhard Lehner 2 Christiane Zarfl 3 Michele Thieme 4 Penny Beames 5 Arnout van Soesbergen 6 Jonathan Higgins 7 Stephanie Januchowski-Hartley 8 Kate A Brauman 9 Luca De Felice 10 Qingke Wen 11 Carlos Garcia De Leaniz 0000-0003-1650-2729 12 Barbara Belletti 13 Lisa Mandle 14 Xiao Yang 15 Jida Wang 16 Nick Mazany-Wright 17 58855__21739__0932171595c140c2bb2a0f4d9e96eb84.pdf pdf.pdf 2021-11-30T16:38:18.0295228 Output 1981530 application/pdf Version of Record true Distributed under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution CC-BY 4.0 Licence. true eng https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
title Global Dam Watch: curated data and tools for management and decision making
spellingShingle Global Dam Watch: curated data and tools for management and decision making
Stephanie Januchowski-Hartley
Carlos Garcia De Leaniz
title_short Global Dam Watch: curated data and tools for management and decision making
title_full Global Dam Watch: curated data and tools for management and decision making
title_fullStr Global Dam Watch: curated data and tools for management and decision making
title_full_unstemmed Global Dam Watch: curated data and tools for management and decision making
title_sort Global Dam Watch: curated data and tools for management and decision making
author_id_str_mv b634c6a9429ed84ced10e9033d27659d
1c70acd0fd64edb0856b7cf34393ab02
author_id_fullname_str_mv b634c6a9429ed84ced10e9033d27659d_***_Stephanie Januchowski-Hartley
1c70acd0fd64edb0856b7cf34393ab02_***_Carlos Garcia De Leaniz
author Stephanie Januchowski-Hartley
Carlos Garcia De Leaniz
author2 Mark Mulligan
Bernhard Lehner
Christiane Zarfl
Michele Thieme
Penny Beames
Arnout van Soesbergen
Jonathan Higgins
Stephanie Januchowski-Hartley
Kate A Brauman
Luca De Felice
Qingke Wen
Carlos Garcia De Leaniz
Barbara Belletti
Lisa Mandle
Xiao Yang
Jida Wang
Nick Mazany-Wright
format Journal article
container_title Environmental Research: Infrastructure and Sustainability
container_volume 1
container_issue 3
container_start_page 033003
publishDate 2021
institution Swansea University
issn 2634-4505
doi_str_mv 10.1088/2634-4505/ac333a
publisher IOP Publishing
college_str Faculty of Science and Engineering
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hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Science and Engineering
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofscienceandengineering
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Science and Engineering
department_str School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Biosciences{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Biosciences
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description Dams, reservoirs, and other water management infrastructure provide benefits, but can also have negative impacts. Dam construction and removal affects progress toward the UN sustainable development goals at local to global scales. Yet, globally-consistent information on the location and characteristics of these structures are lacking, with information often highly localised, fragmented, or inaccessible. A freely available, curated, consistent, and regularly updated global database of existing dams and other instream infrastructure is needed along with open access tools to support research, decision-making and management needs. Here we introduce the Global Dam Watch (GDW) initiative (www.globaldamwatch.org ) whose objectives are: (a) advancing recent efforts to develop a single, globally consistent dam and instream barrier data product for global-scale analyses (the GDW database); (b) bringing together the increasingly numerous global, regional and local dam and instream barrier datasets in a directory of databases (the GDW directory); (c) building tools for the visualisation of dam and instream barrier data and for analyses in support of policy and decision making (the GDW knowledge-base) and (d) advancing earth observation and geographical information system techniques to map a wider range of instream structures and their properties. Our focus is on all types of anthropogenic instream barriers, though we have started by prioritizing major reservoir dams and run-of-river barriers, for which more information is available. Our goal is to facilitate national-scale, basin-scale and global-scale mapping, analyses and understanding of all instream barriers, their impacts and their role in sustainable development through the provision of publicly accessible information and tools. We invite input and partnerships across sectors to strengthen GDW’s utility and relevance for all, help define database content and knowledge-base tools, and generally expand the reach of GDW as a global hub of impartial academic expertise and policy information regarding dams and other instream barriers.
published_date 2021-11-23T04:15:42Z
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