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Department of Water Resources and Irrigation (Nepali: जल तथा मौसम विज्ञान विभाग) is a department under Ministry of Energy, Water Resources and Irrigation. Its mainly works by collecting datas related to hydrology and meteorology throughout Nepal and processing to publish and disseminate them. [1] [2]
Department of Hydrology and Meteorology; Survey Department; Led by officers of Nepal Health Service ... Nepal Agricultural Research Council (NARC) Nepal Telecom;
Nepal Communist Party: 25 December 2020: 20 May 2021 Minister for Energy, Water Resources and Irrigation 8 Sharat Singh Bhandari: People's Socialist Party, Nepal: 4 June 2021: 22 June 2021 Minister for Energy, Water Resources and Irrigation 9 Bishnu Prasad Paudel: Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist) 24 June 2021: 12 July 2021
The department and its branch offices are run by officers of Nepal Engineering Service (Civil/Irrigation). [6]The department has 52 irrigation management offices and project offices along with a few Mechanical Offices and Embankment Offices at central level.
Nepal is a least developed country, with 28.6 percent of the population living in multidimensional poverty. [6] Analysis of trends from 1971 to 2014 by the Department of Hydrology and Meteorology (DHM) shows that the average annual maximum temperature has been increasing by 0.056 °C per year. [7] Precipitation extremes are found to be ...
Nepal is a least developed country, with 28.6 percent of the population living in multidimensional poverty. [12] Analysis of trends from 1971 to 2014 by the Department of Hydrology and Meteorology (DHM) shows that the average annual maximum temperature has been increasing by 0.056 °C per year. [13]
The department is run by officers of Nepal Engineering Service (Civil/Drinking Water). There are currently 20 offices at central level under the department named Federal Water Supply and Sewerage Sewerage Management Project Office. [4] [5]
A team of researchers from The Small Earth Nepal and the country's Department of Hydrology and Meteorology (DHM) collaborated on a review of the damage. Reports of "spinning winds" from locals prompted Archana Shrestha, a meteorologist at the DHM, to investigate.