Dr AFM Kamal Chowdhury University of Maryland: DARE Project, Hydropower Expansion & Sustainable Energy in Eco-Sensitive River Basins
Dr AFM Kamal Chowdhury – Leading the Dynamic Atlas of Riverine Ecosystems and Infrastructure (DARE) Project
By Minhaz Samad Chowdhury
Independent Human Rights Defender | Governance & Policy Analyst
Promoting Human Dignity, Ethical Governance & Access to Justice for All
Dhaka, Bangladesh | 27 March 2026
Why Dr AFM Kamal Chowdhury’s Research Matters for River Rights and Global Sustainability
In an era of rapid economic growth, climate urgency, and massive infrastructure expansion, Dr AFM Kamal Chowdhury, Associate Research Scientist at the University of Maryland Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center (ESSIC), is delivering the evidence-based solutions the world desperately needs.
His pioneering work on hydropower expansion in eco-sensitive river basins, integrated energy-water modelling, and the newly launched Dynamic Atlas of Riverine Ecosystems and Infrastructure (DARE) Project directly supports river defenders, Indigenous communities, and policymakers working to protect freshwater ecosystems while achieving low-carbon energy goals.
Landmark 2024 Nature Sustainability Paper: Hydropower Expansion in Eco-Sensitive River Basins
Dr Chowdhury’s 2024 paper in Nature Sustainability — “Hydropower expansion in eco-sensitive river basins under global energy-economic change” — is already shaping global discourse.
- Low-carbon transition exerts the strongest pressure: >80% of exploitable potential could be developed in >72% of the world’s 20 most eco-sensitive basins by 2050.
- Rapid economic growth alone drives deployment in only 44% of basins today.
- Enhanced integration of variable renewable energy (wind & solar) significantly reduces harmful hydropower deployment while meeting energy targets.
DARE Project: $5 Million Global Initiative Revolutionising River Science
Dr AFM Kamal Chowdhury is co-leading the groundbreaking Dynamic Atlas of Riverine Ecosystems and Infrastructure (DARE) initiative, funded with nearly US$5 million by Schmidt Sciences.
DARE will create the world’s first global time-series dataset on river discharge and the evolution of riverine ecosystems under human influence — an open-science tool that will empower river defenders, governments, and civil society for decades.
Key Research Highlights from Dr AFM Kamal Chowdhury
| Year | Journal | Topic | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | Nature Sustainability | Hydropower in eco-sensitive basins | 49 citations already |
| 2023 | Energy Strategy Reviews | Sustainable electricity pathways – MERCOSUR | 90% emissions cut feasible |
| 2022 | Joule | Low-carbon electricity system – Southern Africa | 34 citations |
| 2024 | Nature Communications | Avoiding ecosystem impacts of renewables | 30 citations |
Google Scholar: 960+ citations | h-index 17 | 19 recent articles (as of March 2026).
View Dr AFM Kamal Chowdhury Google Scholar Profile →
From Bangladesh to Global Leadership
A Bangladeshi scholar who began his academic journey at the International University of Business Agriculture and Technology (Dhaka), Dr Chowdhury has built an international career spanning Singapore University of Technology and Design, UC Santa Barbara, and now the University of Maryland. His research consistently bridges rigorous modelling with real-world policy and environmental justice.
Why This Matters for Human Rights & River Communities
Healthy rivers are fundamental to human dignity, food security, cultural rights, and the rights of future generations. Dr Chowdhury’s science provides the independent evidence that organisations like International Rivers, river defenders, and rights-based advocates need to demand accountable, sustainable development.
As I wrote in my recent open letter to International Rivers, collaboration between researchers like Dr AFM Kamal Chowdhury and civil society is essential for the future of global river governance.
Conclusion & Call to Action
Dr AFM Kamal Chowdhury exemplifies science in service of justice. His leadership on the DARE Project and landmark publications on hydropower and low-carbon pathways offer a clear roadmap for balancing energy needs with river conservation in the Global South.
I extend my heartfelt congratulations to Dr AFM Kamal Chowdhury on the DARE launch and his outstanding contributions.
Let us continue building bridges between rigorous research, community voices, and ethical governance.
Minhaz Samad Chowdhury
Independent Human Rights Defender | Governance & Policy Analyst
Tags: Dr AFM Kamal Chowdhury, DARE Project, University of Maryland, Hydropower, Eco-Sensitive River Basins, Nature Sustainability, Low-Carbon Transition, River Ecosystems, Sustainable Energy Global South, Human Rights Defender
Originally published 27 March 2026 | SEO-optimised for search visibility on sustainable hydropower, river conservation, and Global South energy transition topics.
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