Asia Floods: Connecting the Why Behind the Crisis and the Rivers

For centuries, Asia’s great rivers—from the fertile Mekong delta to the ancient, spiritual flows of the Ganges—have defined the continent’s beauty, culture, and economy, standing as geological marvels and key travel destinations. But these powerful waterways have recently turned rogue: in a terrifying, synchronized pattern, rivers across South and Southeast Asia have burst their banks, delivering destruction on an unprecedented scale. Was this merely a historic bad year, or is the climate forcing a fundamental, permanent change in how these rivers behave? We connect our recent coverage to answer the urgent question: Why did the water rebel, and what does this mean for the future of Asia’s rivers and the millions who depend on them?

Sri Lanka Floods: Beyond the News—Why the Rivers Flood (A Look at the Mahaweli Ganga and Flood Mitigation

The same powerful waterways that nurture Sri Lanka—the Mahaweli, Kelani, and Kalu rivers—periodically turn into engines of destruction. Beyond the shock of the headlines, the recurrence of Sri Lanka’s floods is a complex story of geography, human development, and a rapidly changing climate. This is not just a natural disaster; it’s a profound, annual challenge to the nation’s resilience.