Re: Financial Topics avec aeden
Posted: Sun Apr 16, 2023 8:47 am
Presumed nothing good came out of meeting in Sudan or will.
Egypt's water will be cut off anyways was the warning to issues discussed.
Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD)
For the recent sediment yield reported at El Diem, and estimating a specific weight on the order of 1.0 t/m3 for sediment deposits, the reservoir’s dead storage capacity is sufficient to trap ~100 years of inflowing sediment. This is an accepted conventional design criterion, but it does not result in long-term sustainability.
Egypts erosion losses alone will seal its fate was offered.
The recent sediment yield is 835 t/km2/yr across the 176,000 km2 watershed tributary to the El Diem gage. A recent study by the Water and Land Resource Centre (WLRC) using a very detailed modelling approach indicates that sediment entering GERD will be in the order of 287 million M3/year (WLRC, 2017 unpublished), much higher than previous predictions.
Many issues go to another loot and scoot operation and debt failure map take over.
As development proceeds, financing structures to facilitate productive investment become more important,
for example, to allow the purchase of a communal truck to transport products to market instead of selling to a middleman at depressed prices.
https://www.hydropower.org/sediment-man ... e-dam-gerd
https://www.worldhydropowercongress.org ... 3-congress
Already the blood flows as the slaughter begins.
The masses may start to believe their own observations and logic. Each side will napalm you.
Something about focused measures.
Egypt's water will be cut off anyways was the warning to issues discussed.
Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD)
For the recent sediment yield reported at El Diem, and estimating a specific weight on the order of 1.0 t/m3 for sediment deposits, the reservoir’s dead storage capacity is sufficient to trap ~100 years of inflowing sediment. This is an accepted conventional design criterion, but it does not result in long-term sustainability.
Egypts erosion losses alone will seal its fate was offered.
The recent sediment yield is 835 t/km2/yr across the 176,000 km2 watershed tributary to the El Diem gage. A recent study by the Water and Land Resource Centre (WLRC) using a very detailed modelling approach indicates that sediment entering GERD will be in the order of 287 million M3/year (WLRC, 2017 unpublished), much higher than previous predictions.
Many issues go to another loot and scoot operation and debt failure map take over.
As development proceeds, financing structures to facilitate productive investment become more important,
for example, to allow the purchase of a communal truck to transport products to market instead of selling to a middleman at depressed prices.
https://www.hydropower.org/sediment-man ... e-dam-gerd
https://www.worldhydropowercongress.org ... 3-congress
Already the blood flows as the slaughter begins.
The masses may start to believe their own observations and logic. Each side will napalm you.
Something about focused measures.