Explore our latest white papers & ebooks
Blog & news
6 July 2026
Karst landscapes, from Normandy and the Grands Causses to Guilin, Yucatán, Florida, Madagascar, and the Nullarbor, are major freshwater reservoirs that are hard to predict, vulnerable to turbidity, and essential to drinking-water management
6 July 2026
Dry valleys can kill: parched soils turn rain into sudden, destructive flash floods. Pakistan, the Sahel/Horn countries, and several Gulf and Middle Eastern states top the list of places where dry-valley floods have repeatedly caused the most human harm.
5 July 2026
Yemen has no permanent rivers, yet its dry valleys, wadis, turn into deadly flash floods during intense rainy seasons, destroying homes, killing dozens, and displacing tens of thousands. This post explains how Yemen’s unique hydrology works, why floods are so destructive in a war‑stricken, climate‑vulnerable country, and what it means for water security and flood risk management.
4 July 2026
Denmark’s hydrological challenge is a delicate balancing act: protecting groundwater-dependent drinking water, managing drought and flooding, and adapting to rising coastal and groundwater risks.
1 July 2026
We’re pleased to announce the release of BWI service v2.16.00, bringing meaningful improvements to forecast horizon and data transparency.
25 June 2026
The Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation is a slow-moving climate pattern with outsized influence on river systems. By shaping atmospheric circulation, precipitation, and groundwater recharge over decades, AMO can alter river flow regimes, drought persistence, and flood risk across continental basins.
24 June 2026
Hydropower is entering a more demanding phase. For executives, the central issue is no longer whether hydropower can deliver energy but whether hydropower assets can be managed as basin infrastructure that strengthens grid resilience, water security, and downstream system performance.
24 June 2026
A new feature brings more context to hydrological forecasts by revealing the data origins behind virtual stations.
22 June 2026
Iraq just lived through its driest year since 1933. It also buried people killed by flash floods in the space of a single week. These look like opposite problems. They are the same problem wearing two faces, and it is one Iraq can solve without waiting for a drop of rain.