Here we provide links to the data and modelling tools that we use. These include:
WaterWorld - a spatial policy support system for water risk and hydrological ecosystem services baseline and scenarios for land use, land management and climate change
Globaldamwatch.org - mapping and understanding the world's dams at global, national and basin scale
FreeStation.org - Open source designs for low-cost, DIY environmental sensing
Here we provide links to the publications that we have produced. These include:
Here we provide links to the webinars that have been conducted. These include:
Here we provide links to the key deliverables of the project:
D1.1 Consortium Agreement (month 2)
D1.2 Updated work plan; dissemination plan (month 3)
D1.3 Data management plan (month 4)
D1.4 Compilation of internal quarterly progress reports (month 36); compilation of project workshop reports (month 36)
D2.2 A training programme in the deployment of FreeStation low-cost sensing as part of an environmentally intelligent approach to managing flood risk (month 18, Oct 2025)
D2.3 An online practical user guide for applications of our multiple existing tools to provide evidence in support of land use, infrastructure development and water policy to mitigate hydroclimatic extremes in a range of catchment types and settings, supported by short web tutorials (month 24, April; 2026)
D3.1 Policy brief on points of innovation for the decision-support modelling infrastructure in the Maas/Meuse case (month 6)
D3.2 Perceptual model of the Brahmaputra case and graphical documentation (month 18)
D3.3 Procedural model of the Brahmaputra case and documentation handed over to the living policy labs of WP4 (month 27)
D3.4 Decision-support system prototype with data-assimilation framework handed over to the living policy labs of WP4 (month 33)
D4.1 Report on comprehensive policy assessment of existing climate and flood policies in India and
Bangladesh, flood and navigation measures affected by climate change, and key knowledge gaps in the basin (month 20)
D4.2 A scientific publication (targeted to Environmental Science and Policy) will be drafted that theorises and analyses science-policy gap in flood risk management and inland water navigation (month 28)
D4.3 Process document of the policy labs, explaining the lessons learnt and process followed for knowledge co-creation with potential solutions at scale and associated policy brief (month 30)
D5.1 A mapping of existing river risk and management narratives (including learnings from life histories, interviews and workshops) and problem framing (including media analysis) across levels and scales (month 11, 16)
D5.2 Transboundary Maas/Meuse knowledge exchange and learning workshop report (with executive summaries in Dutch, French and English) and associated policy brief (month 20)
D5.3 A compendium that identifies (especially nature and culture-based) practices that could be revived and/or built on in a culturally appropriate way and assesses nature-based and non-structural solutions (month 30).
D6.1a A webinar in English at the early stages of the project, open to both basin stakeholders and beyond, to foster mutual learning and exchange between global north and global south perspectives on flood management and on the role of environmental intelligence (month 6).
D6.1b Online workshops (in English) allowing stakeholders from the two basins to interact and to share their experience on river management, on the diversity of knowledge in both basins and on the role of environmental intelligence (month 12, 24, 36)
D6.2 Production of a synthesis report focusing on what has been learned from the Brahmaputra and Maas/Meuse basins and associated policy brief. The report will notably shed light on common concerns, problems framings and common interests in the future (month 30)