World’s Rivers in Crisis State Due to Human Influence

Jessica Berman | Washington for VOA

A global analysis concludes that rivers, which are the primary source of water and livelihood for billions of people around the world, are in a crisis state as a result of human activities, such as dam building, agricultural run-off and chemical pollution.

According to the study, nearly 80 percent of the world’s population lives in areas where rivers and water systems are severely threatened by pollution, rapidly growing human populations and the accidental redistribution of plants and animals that destroy indigenous marine life.

Rivers are the single largest renewable source of fresh water for humans, who use them for drinking water, fishing, bathing and recreational activities.

But Peter McIntyre, lead author of the study and a zoologist and river specialist at the University of Wisconsin, says the world’s rivers are having trouble recovering from the fallout of global economic development.

The report found, surprisingly, that water systems in the United States, Western Europe and other industrialized nations were at the greatest risk, despite decades of pollution-control efforts and the technological means to protect and restore river ecosystems.

The report warns that similar degradation is occurring in the developing countries, which don’t have the resources to invest in technologies to clean up their rivers, and where population has been growing very rapidly.

The study found the healthiest rivers are those in areas where human populations are the smallest.

“Many billions of people live in areas where the fundamental quantity and quality of water that they have access to are highly threatened. That suggests that there are real problems in the present and we expect they are only get worse as human populations grow, as resource use per capita continues to increase into the future. And then you overlay climate change on that and things could get very scarey,” McIntyre said.

As the quality of the world’s rivers declines, McIntyre says a major concern is the health of fisheries, the source of food and livelihood for hundreds for millions of people.

“Many of the world’s largest fresh water fisheries are in the great rivers of the world, the Mekong, the Amazon, lots of rivers in tropical Africa. So, there are enormous fisheries that employ and feed large segments of the population in the developing world. And those really are at risk from introduced species, from over-fishing, from pollutants in the fish. You put that all together and there’s real cause for concern,” he said.

McIntyre says developing countries, with the aid of richer nations, should take a lesson from the developed world’s experiences. They should avoid making costly investments in water clean-up technology in favor of strategies to conserve the health of their river environments.

Such strategies include protecting water sheds from polluters to keep the cost of drinking water down and preserving flood planes for flood protection.

The assessment by McIntyre and colleagues on the health of the world’s rivers is published this week in the journal Nature.

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First ever bank conference to discuss Mekong dams

WWF

Financial institutions must play a more active role in promoting sustainable hydropower development in the lower Mekong river basin, says WWF.

On September 24th in Bangkok, Thailand, leading US, European and Asian financial institutions will attend a conference co-convened by WWF and other development partners to highlight the financial, social and environmental risks and responsibilities of hydropower development on the lower Mekong river. The meeting will also explore ways to understand and mitigate these risks.

“It is a missed opportunity,” said Marc Goichot, Sustainable Infrastructure Senior Advisor for WWF Greater Mekong. “Lower Mekong dam sites were selected in the 1960’s and there has not been a process to review them with the benefit of today’s science and technology.”

Currently, there are 11 hydropower dams proposed for the lower Mekong river, which runs through Laos, Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam. If the one of these dams is built it will break the lower Mekong’s ecosystem connectivity, which can have a cascade of negative impacts.

“Putting a dam on the lower Mekong River will block fish migration to spawning grounds, collapsing fish stocks,” said Michael Simon, Lead of the People Infrastructure and Environment Program, Oxfam Australia. “Do lenders want to be associated with putting the food security of 60 million people in some of the world’s poorest countries at risk?”

Forecasts show the productivity of lower Mekong fisheries, which are valued up to USD 7 billion annually, would be reduced by up to 70 percent by lower Mekong mainstream dams. In addition, iconic species such as the Mekong giant catfish and Mekong dolphin would face likely extinction if the proposed dams go ahead.

“Hydropower projects can limit their impact to ecosystem connectivity. For example, a large dam can be built in the floodplain beside a river channel rather than across it, or a hydropower project can have no dam at all,” said Mr Goichot.

In southern Laos, there is such an alternative being proposed by the Lao Department of Electricity and semi-state owned French company CNR (Compagnie Nationale du Rhone).

The proposed Thakho project is adjacent to the Mekong river at the pristine Khone Phapeng waterfalls, an epicentre for tourism in Laos. It works by diverting some water from the Mekong mainstream into a channel where it passes through turbines and back in to the Mekong down stream.

This project has no dam and does not break ecosystem connectivity, allowing for sediment to flow downstream and fish to migrate upstream. Its integrated design also allows for sustainable tourism development.

“Financial institutions are being held accountable by shareholders and the public for the financing decisions they are making. Investing in unsustainable projects is risky to reputations and bottom lines,” said Jérôme Bertrand-Hardy, Deputy Chief Investment Officer at Proparco. “By better managing social and environmental risks, banks can better secure their investment.”

WWF supports a ten-year delay in the approval of lower Mekong river mainstream dams to ensure a comprehensive understanding of all the impacts of their construction and operation. Immediate electricity demands can be met by fast tracking the most sustainable hydropower sites on the lower Mekong’s tributaries.

“Allowing time for innovative technologies and science to inform the lower Mekong river basin’s development plans creates a win-win situation for all parties involved,” said Mr Goichot.

Presentations from the meeting can be downloaded from here.

For more on the Mekong dams visit http://mouthtosource.org/rivers/mekong/?s=hydropower

Indian floods wash away thousands of homes

At least 17 people killed and some 2 million forced to evacuate as rain triggers floods in Uttar Pradesh

Floods triggered by heavy rain in northern India have killed at least 17 people, washed away thousands of homes and forced the evacuation of some 2 million people in a 24-hour period.

A swath of Uttar Pradesh state has been covered by floodwaters spilling over the banks of several rivers that crisscross the region, the state spokesman Diwakar Tripathi said. Soldiers and paramilitary troops were working to evacuate people from marooned villages and move them to relief camps.

“At least 17 people have died overnight. More than a thousand houses have been washed away. Large areas are under water,” Tripathi said.

Northern India has experienced unprecedented rain since August, according to the India Meteorological Department. Most rivers are flowing above the danger mark, including the Yamuna and Ganges that run through Uttar Pradesh.

Temporary shelters and medical facilities are being set up at relief camps, while army helicopters are dropping food and water packets for people stranded in remote villages, said relief organisers.

One of the hardest-hit areas is the industrial town of Moradabad, where some 200,000 people had to be evacuated from the rising water, said Suresh Tomar, a district official.

There was also extensive damage to farmland in the state, with crops worth around 35 billion rupees (£477m) destroyed, Tripathi said.

More rain is forecast and a flood alert has been issued for 18 districts in Uttar Pradesh.

In neighbouring Pakistan, monsoon floods have killed more than 1,700 people and damaged or destroyed nearly 1.9 million homes in the past six weeks.

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Amazon Indians condemn destructive Madeira river dams

Survival International

Indians of several tribes have harshly criticized the Brazilian government for allowing the construction of large hydroelectric dams in the Amazon, including dams on the Madeira river.

In a Declaration signed at the ‘Gathering of the Four Rivers’, a protest against dams on the Madeira, Tapajos, Teles Pires and Xingu rivers, the Indians declared, ‘We condemn the privatization of our natural resources, which brings insecurity and damages whole peoples, cultures and knowledge which have been around for thousands of years, as well as our forests, our rivers and our socio-biodiversity’, and demanded the ‘complete and immediate suspension’ of the construction of large dams on their rivers.

Following discussions with river-dwellers, non-governmental organizations and representatives of the Attorney General’s office about the disastrous impacts the dams are bringing, the Indians participated in a protest march ‘in defense of life and against the construction of hydroelectric dams in the Amazon’ and expressed their anger at the government’s ‘false discourse’ and ‘authoritarianism’ in its push to build the dams.

The construction of the Santo Antonio and Jirau dams on the Madeira river in the western Brazilian Amazon is bringing large-scale immigration to the area, deforestation, the death of fish, dengue epidemics, and increased rates of prostitution and violence. The indigenous communities who are affected have not been adequately consulted and have not given their consent for the project to go ahead.

The threat posed by the Madeira dams to uncontacted Indians was particularly emphasized at the protest: at least five groups of uncontacted Indians live in the area and their lives are at risk as land is being deforested and outsiders are bringing diseases to which they have little resistance.

European companies such as France’s GDF Suez and banks such as Banco Santander are involved in the Madeira river project.

Survival International recently published a report highlighting the hugely negative impacts of hydroelectric dams on indigenous peoples worldwide.

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Laos sees big fish as small price to pay for hydropower

The gloves are now definitely off in regard to the mainstream damming on the Lower Mekong. After reading this piece follow the links to review the presentations given to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Subcommittee on East Asian and Pacific Affairs on Thursday in Washington DC.

The timing is everything.

Jonathan Watts reports for The Guardian

Plans for hydropower plant on the Mekong River threaten habitat of four of the world’s largest freshwater fish, says WWF

Despite the risks to the world’s biggest freshwater fish, Laos has rejected calls for a dam moratorium on the lower reaches of the Mekong because it wants cheap power to develop its economy.

The south-east Asian nation moved this week to secure regional approval for the first major hydropower plant on its stretch of the river in the face of protests from international conservation groups.

Catfish the length of cars and stingrays that weigh more than tigers are threatened by the proposed 800m barrier, but the government said the economic benefits outweigh the environmental risks.

“We don’t want to be poor any more,” said Viraphone Viravong, director general of the country’s energy and mines department. “If we want to grow, we need this dam.”

In a submission to the Mekong river commission (MRC) on Wednesday, Laos said it wants to build a 1.26GW-hydropower plant at Sayabouly in northern Laos to generate foreign exchange income.

If approved, about 90% of the electricity would be sold to neighbours Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia.

It is part of a major plan to expand the economy through the utilisation of natural resources. According to Viravong, 20% of Laos’ GDP will come from hydropower and mining by 2020, up from about 4% today.

Sayabouly is the first of 11 proposed dams on the lower reaches of the Mekong, a river that is already heavily dammed upstream in China.

The MMRC (I think Jonathan means MRC here-Admin) – made up of representatives from Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam and Thailand – will now assess the environmental impact of the project, but conservation groups fear the procedure is flawed and have called for a 10-year moratorium on hydropower on the river.

“This dam is the greatest challenge the MRC has faced since it was formed. It is the most serious test of its usefulness and relevance,” said Marc Goichot, of the WWF. “It is already very clear this dam would amplify and accelerate the negative impacts of Chinese dams to the Mekong delta. What are the other impacts?”

Concerns have been raised about sedimentation, fisheries and the migration patterns of endangered freshwater species.

Four of the world’s 10 biggest freshwater fish migrate up the Mekong to spawn. Among them is the Mekong giant catfish, which is the size of a bull shark, and the Mekong stingray, which can weigh up to 600kg.

The dam – which is being designed by Swiss company Colencois and the Thai contractors Karnchang – is also likely to affect the flow of nutrients along a delta that sustains tens of millions of people.

The Laos authorities insist the dam will be designed to mitigate the impact on food security, ecosystems and wildlife, but officials acknowledge that no solution is ideal for the environment.

“It won’t be 100% perfect, but we believe mitigation measures will be effective. We must balance out the costs and benefits,” said Viravong.

He felt there was no alternative. “We have done studies on micro-energy and renewables, but they are expensive. I don’t think the world can subsidise that. If we do it ourselves, only cheap energy from hydropower will do.”

Read also from The Senate Foreign Relations Committee chaired by Senator Jim Webb of Virginia on Thursday, 23rd Sept 2010:

Speakers were:

Mr. Joseph Yun
Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Southeast Asia
Washington, DC

Download Testimony

Dr. Richard Cronin
Senior Associate,
The Stimson Center
Washington, DC

Download Testimony

Ms. Aviva Imhof
Campaigns Director
International Rivers
Berkeley, CA

Download Testimony

Ms. Dekila Chungyalpa
Director for the Greater Mekong Program
World Wildlife Fund
Washington, DC

Download Testimony

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