Water, Electric Energy and Flood
Volume 2 - Issue 3
Oleg Khalidullin*
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- Independent Researcher, Almaty, Republic of Kazakhstan
*Corresponding author:
Oleg Khalidullin, Independent Researcher, Almaty, Republic of Kazakhstan
Received: February 26, 2019; Published: March 06, 2019
DOI: 10.32474/OAJESS.2019.02.000136
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Short Communication
Ways of water conservation in rivers are based on the creation
of bulky dams with flooding of large areas and the creation of
hydroelectric power plants (HPP). Man-made reservoirs are built
on all residential continents, occupying more and more large areas
with the destruction of biota. For example, 280 hydroelectric
power plants are under construction in South America. In China
- http://www.rukivnogi.com/articles/top-10-samyh-bolshih-gesv-
mire: “In front of the hydroelectric dam, a large reservoir was
formed, containing 22 cu. km of water and having a water surface
area of 1045 square meters. km In Brazil, 24 electric generators
were recently installed on the dam. The volume of water in the
reservoir almost reaches 46 cubic kilometers, and the surface area
of the water is 2430 square meters. km In Russia, a hydroelectric
dam holds the mass of a large Krasnoyarsk reservoir, having a
water surface area of approximately 2000 square meters. km. “
The main trouble of all reservoirs is the risk of breaking through
and destroying everything below the dams. No less trouble is that
the biota disappears under the reservoir mirror, and with it, the
mechanism of water conversion in the animal and plant worlds,
accumulated over millions of years. The area of plant leaves alone
is 3 to 4 times the area of the entire land. The size of it, not less than
the area of the oceans - https://vuzlit.ru/984043/transpiratsiya
# 597. This is in untouched land, now by 2015, this land remains
30%. Everything else is plowed up, dumped by dumps, rolled up
with asphalt. The natural water path on land is movement along
the biota food and plant paths. Humanity at an accelerating pace
destroys recent natural ranges.
Short Communication|