Dear MEL Topic Readers,
Rivers set free: Why countries are tearing down hundreds of dams
Rivers naturally experience seasonal fluctuations, flooding during
heavy rain or melting snow, and drying up during droughts. Dams are built to
prevent floods, generate hydropower, and manage water flow and supply for farming,
daily life, and navigation. In Europe, there are as many as 1.2 million water barriers, such as dams and weirs, but many of them
have been removed recently to restore the environment and ecosystems. In fact, Sweden,
Finland, and Spain each removed more than 100 barriers in 2025 alone. If a
river is blocked, some fish species, such as salmon, face difficulty reaching upstream
habitats for reproduction, and ecosystems are fragmented by barriers. Also, water
in reservoirs can be lost faster through evaporation. But removing such barriers
is no easy task, as it takes years of environmental assessments, engineering studies,
and public consensus. In the meantime, are they prepared for more extreme rains,
severe drought, and rising temperatures that will melt ice and snow faster
without dams?
Read the article and learn why dams are removed in Europe.