Article 6A22A ‘The hydropower goldrush’: how Europe’s first wild river national park saw off the dams

‘The hydropower goldrush’: how Europe’s first wild river national park saw off the dams

by
Karen McVeigh in Tirana
from on (#6A22A)

The Vjosa River in Albania teems with more than 1,000 species, while rare vultures and Balkan lynx visit its banks. It has seen off the threat of a surge in barriers, but the shadow of development persists

The fast-moving Vjosa River in Albania curves and braids, sweeping our raft away from the floodplain towards the opposite bank, and back again. The islands that split the waterway in two are temporary, forming, growing, then dissipating so that this truly wild river, one of the last in Europe, never looks the same.

There's a saying, you can't step in the same river twice'," says Ulrich Eichelmann, the head of Riverwatch, a Vienna-based NGO for river protection, who is paraphrasing the Greek philosopher Heraclitus. A river is a living, dynamic thing, an architect of its surroundings. It changes all the time. That's its beauty."

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