Riverwatch

Riverwatch RiverWatch is a society for the protection of rivers. Currently we aim to Save the Blue Heart of Europe Why rivers? Rivers are our Earth’s lifeline. zerstört.

We aspire to protect the last unimpaired rivers and floodplains by engaging globally against projects that destroy rivers, particularly dam projects. RiverWatch engages globally against projects that destroy rivers, particularly dam projects. Our ambition is to conserve the last unimpaired rivers as well as their flooding areas. RiverWatch is a campaigning organisation; that is, we act in oppositi

on to certain projects and promote public awareness. We consider ourselves a platform for all those who care about rivers. The majority of species can be found in or by streams. They are hot spots for biodiversity. What is true for all other species is also true for human beings. Our history is closely connected with rivers. Early high cultures such as the Sumerians in Mesopotamia (Euphrates and Tigris) and the Egyptians (Nile) developed in river valleys. Today, rivers count amongst the most endangered habitats on Earth – if not THE most endangered habitat of all. In order to accommodate river navigation, flood control, industrial parks, agriculture, housing developments, etc. rivers are being destroyed. However, what puts them most at risk is the construction of dams. Rivers need a stronger lobby: while numerous NGOs advocate exclusively for the protection of rain forests, oceans, or mountains, hardly anyone concern themselves with rivers on a global scale. The only two exceptions are International Rivers based in Berkeley (USA) and their small equivalent in France (European Rivers).

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RiverWatch engagiert sich weltweit gegen Projekte, die Flüsse zerstören, vor allem gegen Staudammprojekte. Unser Ziel ist es, die letzten intakten Flüsse und deren Überschwemmungsflächen zu erhalten. RiverWatch ist eine Kampagnenorganisation, d.h. wir werden verstärkt gegen Projekte auftreten und die Öffentlichkeit suchen. Wir verstehen uns als Plattform für alle, denen die Flüsse am Herzen liegen. Warum ausgerechnet Flüsse? Flüsse sind die Lebensadern der Erde. Ein Großteil der Artenvielfalt kommt in und an Flüssen vor. Sie sind hot spots der Biodiversität. Was für die Arten gilt, gilt auch für Menschen. Unsere Geschichte ist eng mit Flüssen verbunden. Hochkulturen wie bei den Sumerern in Mesopotamien (Euphrat und Tigris) den Ägyptern (Nil) entstanden an Flüssen. Vor allem aber gehören Flüsse und ihre Auen zu den gefährdetsten Lebensräumen weltweit, vermutlich sind sie sogar DER bedrohteste Lebensraumtyp überhaupt. Flüsse werden für die Schifffahrt, den Hochwasserschutz, für Gewerbegebiete, Landwirtschaft, Siedlungsbau etc. Die größte Bedrohung ist jedoch der Staudammbau. Flüsse brauchen eine stärkere Lobby: Während sich zahlreiche NGOs ausschließlich etwa für dem Schutz der Regenwälder, der Meere oder der Berge engagieren, kümmert sich international kaum jemand um die Flüsse. Lediglich die in Berkeley (USA) ansässige International Rivers und ein kleines Pendant in Frankreich (European Rivers).

30/04/2026
What makes Balkan rivers special and why do we call them the Blue Heart of Europe? 💙,How does this heartbeat affect the ...
23/04/2026

What makes Balkan rivers special and why do we call them the Blue Heart of Europe? 💙
,
How does this heartbeat affect the whole living world around us? Why does Neretva stand out, and what projects threaten its uniqueness? What are Science Weeks and what awaits us at one such event, in June this year, on the river Uni?

Find out in the podcast below!

Save the Blue Heart of Europe

Danas je Dan planete Zemlje. 🌍🌎🌏

Mi ga posvećujemo rijekama koje su posljednjih dana u fokusu, od Vrbasa preko Plive do Neretve. 🌊

📍Po čemu su balkanske rijeke posebne i zašto ih zovemo Plavo srce Evrope? 💙

Kako otkucaji ovog srca utiču na sav živi svijet oko nas? Zašto se Neretva posebno izdvaja i koji sve projekti ugrožavaju njenu jedinstvenost? Šta su to Sedmice nauke i šta nas čeka na jednom takvom događaju, u junu ove godine, na rijeci Uni?

I na kraju: kako je uopšte počela borba za rijeke Balkana i zašto se za njih vrijedi boriti?

O svemu ovome razgovaramo sa našim partnerima i saborcima iz kampanje Sačuvajmo Plavo srce Evrope Save the Blue Heart of Europe.

S nama su u novom podcastu:
▪️Ulrich Eichelmann, direktor međunarodne organizacije Riverwatch koja koordiniše kampanju Sačuvajmo Plavo srce Evrope,
▪️prof. dr Gabriel Singer, Univerzitet u Insbruku (Austrija), vodeći naučnik istraživanja na Neretvi koja su održana u okviru Sedmice nauke 2022. i 2023. godine, i vodeći naučnik istraživanja na Uni koja će se realizovati u junu ove godine.

Pratite nas večeras od 20:00h na našem YouTube kanalu od 20:00 časova.

Link za podcast: https://youtu.be/esBFbCmbNNc?si=B6-zYG0b7Za94rtu

🎙️Saznajte sve što niste znali o rijekama, naučite nešto novo, pridružite nam se u borbi!

13/04/2026

Hydropower in the Balkans is both a promise and a threat: investments, political games, small hydropower plants and threatening ecological consequences

Meet Pietro Stefano.28, from Milano. Philosophy degree, then a bicycle trip through the Balkans that changed everything....
07/04/2026

Meet Pietro Stefano.

28, from Milano. Philosophy degree, then a bicycle trip through the Balkans that changed everything. He went back and got a Master’s in Environmental Management. He’s been in Albania since 2019, volunteering on science weeks, assisting research teams, and learning Albanian.

Now he coordinates ReForest Vjosa, working under the guidance of botanist Dr. Anton Drescher and alongside local teams to plant 8,000 native willows and poplars into degraded floodplain along the Vjosa River.

His philosophy: don’t police people into caring about the river. Educate them.

“Riparian areas are my habitat.”

📍 Tepelenë, Vjosa Wild River National Park, Albania

From Bosnia and Herzegovina to Albania and Slovenia, rivers are facing unprecedented pressure from hydropower, mismanage...
07/04/2026

From Bosnia and Herzegovina to Albania and Slovenia, rivers are facing unprecedented pressure from hydropower, mismanagement, and legal intimidation. In our latest newsletter, we highlight urgent warnings from scientists about the Buk Bijela dam, celebrate a major victory for the Stupčanica River, report on ongoing advocacy in Montenegro and Slovenia, and reveal alarming new data on the Vjosa Wild River National Park.

Be sure to sign up for our mailing list to get these straight into your inbox!

Photo: Erhard Kraus

https://balkanrivers.net/en/pages/newsletter-subscription

Romanian river Bâsca Mare needs your help!👉 Click the link below for more information, a sample message, and where to se...
01/04/2026

Romanian river Bâsca Mare needs your help!

👉 Click the link below for more information, a sample message, and where to send your email.

Send your message to corrupt Ministry.

Not pictured: The possible extinction of one of the last wild populations of HuchenThe upper Drina River isn’t “empty sp...
29/03/2026

Not pictured: The possible extinction of one of the last wild populations of Huchen

The upper Drina River isn’t “empty space,” it is the most critical sanctuary left for the endangered Danube salmon (Hucho hucho). This apex predator is the heartbeat of a complex ecosystem that supports thousands of species, from river birds to the macroinvertebrates that form the food web’s foundation.

The proposed Buk Bijela dam would replace these ancient spawning rapids with a stagnant reservoir graveyard. Then comes the ‘flush mode’: violent, artificial surges of water that scour the riverbed downstream of the dam, uprooting plants and killing any life in their path. Along with two more dams and 11 tributary barriers, this entire wilderness faces total erasure.

The current Environmental Impact Assessment ignores these facts. 163 scientists agree: this flawed report must be rejected to save the Drina.

Read the full scientific warning using the link in the comment below!

The Buk Bijela dam is back 😡A new environmental impact assessment has been released for the 118 MW Buk Bijela dam projec...
25/03/2026

The Buk Bijela dam is back 😡

A new environmental impact assessment has been released for the 118 MW Buk Bijela dam project on the upper Drina in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Experts say the report is "more than economical with the truth."

From ignoring the total collapse of the Danube salmon population to dismissing the impact on Montenegro’s UNESCO-protected Tara Canyon, this project represents the worst type of hydropower exploitation.

We cannot allow this river and critical spawning habitat to be turned into a stagnant reservoir.

Read the full press release and the scientific critical comments 👊
Photo: Bruno D'Amicis

163 experts call for an immediate halt to the hydropower project, citing an extremely flawed Environmental Impact Assessment and widespread irreversible ecological damage....

The term “renewable” has become a shield for one of the most destructive industries on the planet: Hydropower.For too lo...
19/03/2026

The term “renewable” has become a shield for one of the most destructive industries on the planet: Hydropower.

For too long, hydro has been marketed as a climate solution. But a river is a living, breathing system. When we build a dam, we don’t just “borrow” the water—we break the connection between the mountains and the sea.

From blocking ancient fish migrations to emitting potent methane gases from reservoirs, hydropower is far from ‘green’. It is an extractive industry that trades long-term ecological health for short-term electricity.

17/03/2026

A river is being destroyed right now.
We know — because we watched it. Image by image.

Here are the two free tools we use to monitor rivers in the Balkans

Tool 1: Google Earth (earth.google.com)

Open Google Earth. Find your river. Look for the globe-with-arrow icon — that's the Historical Imagery tool. High resolution. You pick the date. Screenshot and compare.

⚠️ Not the clock icon — that's the animated timelapse. Lower resolution.

Tool 2: Copernicus Browser (browser.dataspace.copernicus.eu)
For right now. Updates every 5 days. Timestamp on every image. Dated, verified, undeniable.

🔖 Save this. Send it to someone who lives near a river.

📩 Find something? Send it to us → balkanrivers.org

Google Earth imagery: Google, Landsat, Copernicus



Video by .d.lim
Music ._fox

14/03/2026

Our film KOMARNICA: The Wild That Remains is now officially out on the YouTube channel, released today for the

Filmed in Montenegro, the documentary explores one of Europe’s last wild river canyons and the people fighting to protect it from a proposed dam.
The film was created as part of the , together with , , Center and the movement.

If you believe wild rivers should remain free-flowing, please watch the film and sign the petition to stop the dam!

A WildReach documentary by
, , and

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