EARTH · RIVERS & FLOODS · BANGLADESH

Ganges River Discharge

The latest reading on the Ganges at Hardinge Bridge, Bangladesh — from the Copernicus GloFAS model, reporting river discharge (cubic metres per second). The sacred river of the Indian subcontinent, its lower reach swelling with the summer monsoon before joining the Brahmaputra.The figure below is live, shown with the time it was taken, and framed as a measurement of flow — never a flood verdict.

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What this reading means

River dischargeis the volume of water passing this point each second, in cubic metres per second (m³/s) — the standard way hydrologists size a river. GloFAS estimates it by routing rainfall and snowmelt down the whole basin. On the probe, the Ganges here read about 14,996 m³/s (high flow); the live figure above will differ with the season. It is a measure of how big the river is running — not a statement that it is flooding, which depends on the river’s own banks downstream.

About this reading

SOURCECopernicus GloFAS
LOCATIONHardinge Bridge, Bangladesh
REPORTSDischarge · daily

The Ganges’s discharge is estimated by the Copernicus Global Flood Awareness System (GloFAS), served keyless via the Open-Meteo Flood API. The point used here is the river’s verified main-stem cell near Hardinge Bridge, Bangladesh— chosen so the reading tracks the trunk of the river rather than a side channel — and the model updates daily.

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