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  2. Water resources management in Brazil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_resources_management...

    Water resources management is a key element of Brazil's strategy to promote sustainable growth and a more equitable and inclusive society. Brazil's achievements over the past 70 years have been closely linked to the development of hydraulic infrastructure for hydroelectric power generation and just recently to the development of irrigation infrastructure, especially in the Northeast region.

  3. Water management in the Metropolitan Region of São Paulo

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_management_in_the...

    The main stakeholders in water management in MRSP are the state government, the state water and sanitation utility Sabesp and 35 municipal governments. A basin committee for the Alto Tietê basin, which supplies the other half of the water for the MRSP, brings together all stakeholders. The legal framework at the state level is based on two key ...

  4. Brazilian jurisdictional waters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazilian_jurisdictional...

    Boundaries of Brazil's jurisdictional waters, including the latest continental shelf claims. Brazil's jurisdictional waters (Portuguese: águas jurisdicionais brasileiras, AJB), also known as the Blue Amazon (Amazônia Azul), [a] are the riverine and oceanic spaces over which Brazil exerts some degree of jurisdiction over activities, persons, installations and natural resources through the ...

  5. Environmental governance in Brazil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_governance...

    The NWRP aims to promote water as a resource with economic value and “creates structures for integrated governance of all water uses at the level of the hydrographic basinriver basin councils (RBCs) – that work in tandem with more traditional management such as municipal and state water and environmental agencies”. [24]

  6. Tocantins basin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tocantins_basin

    The Tocantins basin is the second largest in energy production in Brazil. The average discharge from the hydrographic basin, in Tucuruí, is estimated at 12,000 m³/s, with the contribution of the Araguaia and Tocantins rivers being similar, and that of the Itacaiúnas River, much lower (600 m³/s). [5]

  7. International Network of Basin Organizations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Network_of...

    Other countries, notably France and Spain which both have a long tradition of well-established river basin organizations (see fr:Agence de l'eau and es:Confederación hidrográfica), are represented both at the Ministerial level and by river basin organizations. Algeria, Brazil and Mexico, which have all established river basin organizations ...

  8. List of rivers of Brazil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rivers_of_Brazil

    Das Rãs River; Ratones River; Real River (Brazil) Regame River; Reis Magos River; Represa Grande River; Riachão River (Bahia) Riacho River (Espírito Santo) Ribeira de Iguape River; Ribeira River (Paraíba) Ribeira River (Paraná) Ribeirão River (Araraduara River) Rio de Janeiro (Bahia) Riozinho River (Amazonas) Riozinho River (Braço Menor ...

  9. Transfer of the São Francisco River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transfer_of_the_São...

    The Transfer of the São Francisco River is a large-scale interbasin transfer to the dry sertão in the four northeastern states of Ceará, Rio Grande do Norte, Paraíba and Pernambuco in Brazil. The project, which was given the green light to go ahead by Brazil's government in 2005, is estimated to cost US$2 billion and is expected to improve ...