Transboundary EIA in Lower Mekong basin almost impossible, experts warn

Supalak Ganjanakhundee for The Nation

Experts warned yesterday that it was really an uphill task to conduct a transboundary Environment Impact Assessment (EIA) in the Lower Mekong basin to address the consequences of a project in one country that might affect another.

Most development projects in the Lower Mekong basin countries – Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam – have transboundary implications and a significant impact on the environment. Hydropower projects might generate more energy for one country, but they could have a negative impact such as a massive reduction in fish stocks or a deterioration in the environment in another country, Mekong River Commission (MRC)’s environmental governance specialist Nguyen Van Duyen said.

MRC members have their own environment impact assessment laws, but these regulations do not require that transboundary impacts also be addressed, he explained.

Besides, transboundary environmental impact assessments could ignite conflicts among members. For instance, Laos is currently caught in a dispute with Cambodia and Vietnam over the Xayaburi dam, which will be constructed in mainstream Mekong. The two downstream countries want the hydropower project to be halted. Though the MRC facilitated a process to establish a framework for conducting transboundary EIA in 2004, little progress has been made on the issue since then, Duyen told an international conference on transboundary river management in Phuket yesterday.

According to the framework, projects requiring transboundary EIA include hydropower, irrigation, port and river works, industrial and mining projects, aquaculture, navigation and water supply projects, Duyen said.

He added that transboundary EIA should focus on public participation and be accessible to those who might be potentially affected. If a transboundary EIA for Lower Mekong basin is conducted, then it could supplement MRC procedures for notification, prior consultation and agreement, he said. However, he said, little progress had been made in establishing a framework because each country’s laws and regulations on EIA are different, he said.

Some members have proposed that the transboundary EIA framework for the Lower Mekong basin should be a non-binding technical guideline for development projects in member countries. Timo Koivurova, research professor of the Northern Institute for Environment and Minority Law at University of Lapland, suggested that countries in the Mekong basin sign the 1991 Convention on Environmental Impact Assessment in a Transboundary Context, which is widely known as Espoo.

Though the Espoo is a regional convention meant mostly for Europe, it has contributed to the development of transboundary EIA practice globally, he said. More than 30 countries have signed in the Espoo convention since it was implemented in 1997. The International Court of Justice cited that the transboundary EIA is part of the general international law, to which all members of the UN are obliged to commit, he said.

Koivurova used the Baltic Sea Gas Pipeline project as an example for transboundary EIA procedure to be applied to the affected states. More than 300 executives, officials and experts from Mekong countries and other 14 river basins from across the world gathered in Phuket to discuss transboundary river management. One of the topics on the agenda was achieving a balance in development in order to maintain water, food and energy security. The conference, ending with an MRC ministerial meeting today, aims to take a message to the UN Conference on Sustainable Development in Rio de Janeiro next month.

Source

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As Mekong Leaders Gather, Public Awaits Answers on Xayaburi Dam

Save The Mekong 1 May 2012

Phuket, Thailand –As the Mekong River Commission (MRC) member countries gather today for the MRC’s Mekong 2 Rio International Conference on Transboundary River Basin Management, the Save the Mekong coalition has called upon regional governments to immediately address the ambiguities that have been left unanswered with respect to the future of the Xayaburi Dam and other mainstream dams.

On April 20th, the Save the Mekong coalition sent letters to the MRC’s respective Council members and CEO Mr. Hans Guttman asking for clarification on whether the prior consultation process for the Xayaburi Dam remains open and whether approval has been granted to build the Xayaburi Dam. These concerns follow the April 17th announcement by Xayaburi Dam developer Ch. Karnchang that it had signed a $711 million construction contract with the Xayaburi Power Company, and that construction on the dam commenced on March 15, 2012.

“Ch. Karnchang has no right to build this project because no regional agreement has been made,” said Niwat Roykaew, Chair of the Chiang Khong Conservation Group in Thailand. “In December, the four governments agreed to postpone the decision on the dam, in order to carry out a transboundary impact assessment of the Mekong mainstream dams. Thailand and Laos must act decisively and demand a stop to all construction activities.”

The Save the Mekong coalition also expressed concern over reports that the Thai government had signed the Xayaburi Dam’s power purchase agreement and granted permission for state-owned Krung Thai Bank to fund this dam, which appears to be in direct violation with the 1995 Mekong Agreement. The coalition urged Thailand to immediately withdraw all involvement in the dam.

“The MRC’s prior consultation process is not finished, and yet construction is starting. Thailand and Laos are endangering the entire future of the Mekong River Basin,” said Pianporn Deetes, Thailand Campaign Coordinator for International Rivers. “Before regional cooperation becomes jeopardized, it’s time the four countries renew their commitment to work together to protect the Mekong.”

“The Xayaburi Dam is not on the agenda of the Mekong2Rio conference, but will be the elephant in the room,” said Youra Sun, Executive Director of My Village in Cambodia. “Now is the time to spotlight the urgent need for the Mekong governments to chart a clear political path forward on the Xayaburi Dam.”

Tu Dao Trong, a representative of Vietnam Rivers Network said, “If the Mekong governments really want to discuss the future of transboundary cooperation around the Mekong River, they first need to agree on an immediate halt to the Xayaburi Dam while further studies are underway. We hope this conference becomes an opportunity for real dialogue.”

The Save the Mekong coalition’s April 20th letter stated that “scientific evidence to date overwhelmingly supports our position that these dams will cause significant and irreparable damage to the Mekong River and the people who depend on it.” The coalition has called upon regional governments to work together to protect the Mekong River as the river is central to the lives, ecology, and cultures of the region.

The Save the Mekong coalition fully supports the actions of Thai villagers from the Mekong region, who have traveled to Phuket and will be presenting a petition to the MRC member governments this morning to raise awareness about the Xayaburi Dam and call for its cancellation.

Mekong 2 Rio is considered a key regional event in the run-up to the United Nations’ Rio+20 Summit on Sustainable Development that world leaders will attend in Brazil in June. The Xayaburi Dam has become one of the most controversial sustainable development issues in Southeast Asia.

Contacts:
Dr. Tu Dao Trong, Representative of Vietnam Rivers Network. T: +84 913 236 542, E: [email protected]
Ms. Pianporn Deetes, Thailand Campaign Coordinator, International Rivers. T: +66 81 422 0111, E: [email protected]
Mr. Niwat Roykaew, Chair of the Chiang Khong Conservation Group in Thailand. T: +66 89 955 7890, E: [email protected]
Mr. Sun Youra, Executive Director, My Village, Cambodia, T: +855 16 590 111, E: [email protected]

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Trading-off fish biodiversity, food security, and hydropower in the Mekong River Basin

Featured

Guy Ziv, Eric Baran, So Nam, Ignacio Rodríguez-Iturbe, and Simon A. Levin

The Mekong River Basin, site of the biggest inland fishery in the world, is undergoing massive hydropower development. Planned dams will block critical fish migration routes between the river’s downstream floodplains and upstream tributaries. Here we estimate fish biomass and biodiversity losses in numerous damming scenarios using a simple ecological model of fish migration. Our framework allows detailing trade-offs between dam locations, power production, and impacts on fish resources. We find that the completion of 78 dams on tributaries, which have not previously been subject to strategic analysis, would have catastrophic impacts on fish productivity and biodiversity. Our results argue for reassessment of several dams planned, and call for a new regional agreement on tributary development of the Mekong River Basin.

Report here… Source

sustainable development | hydropower planning | fish species richness

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Tien River heavily contaminated, agency warns

Tuoi Tre

The Tien River, which runs through several provinces in the Mekong Delta, has been severely contaminated, with some pollutants exceeding the limits by up to 1,000 times, seriously affecting the life and health of local people, authorities reported.

The tests of surface water samples recently taken from the river showed that the suspended solids (SS), iron, ammonium (from animal waste and sewer water), chemical oxygen demand (COD), biological oxygen demand (BOD) and biochemical oxygen demand (BOD5) have exceeded the allowable limits by the country’s standards, the departments of natural resources and environment in Vinh Long and Tien Giang provinces reported.

Last year another test of samples taken from 42 locations on the river in Dong Thap province also showed the samples failed to meet all major safety targets, the authorities said.

The content of grease and oil in the river water was 1.5-75 higher than the permissible limits while the content of Coliform, a bacterium that causes bowel disease, was 100 to 1,000 times higher and that of E. Coli, another bacterium that can cause serious infections, was 22-860 times higher.

Traces of pesticide also were found in the samples, the authorities said.

Luu Minh Manh, head of the Tien Giang Environmental Protection Sub-department, said that the My Tho City discharges into the river about 50,000 cubic meters of untreated household wastewater daily.

A project to build a household wastewater treatment plant for My Tho has been set up, but it has yet to be approved by the competent agency, Manh said.

If all other cities located along the river were taken into account, the total volume of such wastewater would be very large. Meanwhile, no study has been done on how many harmful substances in household wastewater can affect the quality of river water, which is used every day by local people, he said.

According to other experts, the river has also been polluted by untreated industrial waste released into the river by factories and breeding farms located outside industrial parks.

Building a waste treatment system requires large investment, so many companies deliberately discharged untreated waste into the river and were ready to pay fines instead when their violation was discovered by competent agencies, experts said.

Dare not to bathe in the river

Nguyen Van Thu, 84, in Tien Giang’s Chau Thanh District, located along the river, said he and many other local residents have neither dared to bathe in the river nor used its water for washing clothing.

“Whenever going near the river bank, I always find grease, discharged by seafood processing facilities nearby, floating on the water. People who bathe in the river will suffer rashes on their skin caused by the water. Last Tet I watered my flower plants using the river water and the flowers withered soon afterwards,” Thu said.

Nguyen Van Tu, a senior fisherman in the district, said the anchovy and lòng tong (a kind of gudgeon) population has decreased in the area, while many species of fish that can survive in contaminated water have become increasingly common.

“The river water is very dirty and I have found nobody here bathing in it anymore. As a fisherman, I frequently have to soak myself in the river, so I often suffer from itches,” he said.

Meanwhile, a large number of people in Tan Hong District and Tram Chim Town in Dong Thap Province are suffering from the untreated wastewater released from fish breeding farms.

Most of the farms have not complied with regulations on treating such wastewater, the Tan Hong natural resources and environment department said.

Source

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Mekong Delta reels under repeated disasters

by Pham Hoang Nam for VietNam News

Known as the nation’s rice basket, blessed with fertile soil and favorable climatic conditions, the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta has been at the forefront of Viet Nam’s amazing agricultural transformation in the Doi moi (renewal) period.

The nation went from being a net food importer until the late 1980s to one of the top exporters in the world of rice, pepper, shrimp, coffee, cashew nuts and other produce.

However, this dramatic transformation is now under threat with the Mekong Delta reeling under the impacts of natural and man-made disasters including climate change.

Less rainfall, serious salt water intrusion and more landslides are becoming a fact of life that affects the 18 million residents of the region.

Huynh Minh E, who has spent all his life in An Binh Hamlet on Dat Islet in Ben Tre Province, said things have changed drastically over the last few years.

“In the past, we suffered six months of salt-water intrusion, but now, this has expanded to seven months because of reduced rainfall,” he said.

This means that he has less time to grow his rice crop and that the quality of the crop is also affected.
“Our lives become harder when we have to live longer with salt water which even my coconuts sour,” he said.

The living standard of most delta residents, whose lives are based largely on water resources from the Mekong River, has fallen as production and daily life have become more difficult.

The saline water intrusion brings in sand from the sea and changes the living environment for some trees and plants like water coconuts and mangroves that were planted to fight erosion.

“We have lost over 100ha of land on the island. Water coconuts are not able to protect our land any more,” E said.

Deputy Director of Dong Thap Province’s Agriculture and Rural Development Department, Dang Ngoc Loi, concurred with E. He said that since 2004, the province has spent several billion dong to build a 30m dyke stretching along 4km to protect Sa Dec Town.

“We have to build another 6-7km to protect the whole town. If we don’t, Sa Dec will no longer exist,” Loi said. The town is the commercial hub of Dong Thap Province.

In fact, all eight districts in Dong Thap are facing serious erosion problems.

The salt-water intrusion has had other impacts as well.

The rice snail is a specialty at Phu Da Islet, Vinh Binh Commune, Cho Lach District, Ben Tre. In recent times, the quantity of these snails has been severely reduced and residents have already set up a preservation area on a 3km long section of the Tien River.

“Though we try hard to protect it, we are afraid that the degrading environment will kill it,” said Nguyen Van Hung, chairman of Vinh Tien Aquaculture Co-operative, who manages the preservation area.

Households engage in raising fish in cages of rafts are finding it difficult to continue their vocation.
“Last year, my family had to remove our fish cage to the main Tien River instead of the river’s tributary because the fish could not survive there,” said To Thi Diep, a fish cage owner in Sa Dec.

In an effort to rejuvenate fish stocks, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Viet Nam has released 272,000 local varieties of fish and shrimp, including 5,000 giant carps – an endangered fish indigenous to the Mekong River – late last week into rivers in Ben Tre and Dong Thap.

“All the changes cannot be blamed on climate change. Local economic activities and humans have contributed greatly,” Le Trinh of the Environment and Sustainable Development Institute told Viet Nam News.

Illegal sand exploitation on the rivers has worsened the erosion and landslide problems, while wastewater from residential areas and industrial parks along the Mekong have severely polluted the environment, he said.

“We should distinguish between climate change’s impacts and human impacts on the environment,” said Nguyen Hoang Tri, general secretary of Viet Nam National Committee for the UNESCO Programme “Man and Biosphere”.
“Only then we will get the right direction to solve problems,” he said. Mekong Delta farmers are doing several things to try and adapt the changes that they are confronting.

“We water our fields earlier now to allow trees and rice to retain water longer. The time for rice harvest has been adjusted to minimise salt water intrusion,” said Nguyen Van Nhem, a farmer on Dat Islet.

Farmers in the islet have also planted floating rice to cope with the flooding.

“We are carrying out a project to plant another variety of tree that can live with the sand brought in by the sea so that it can protect our land,” said Le Van Thu, WWF project manager in Ben Tre.

Building dykes, constructing stronger houses, setting up an early alarm system, making proper land use plans, educating children and adults on coping with climate change and increasing the ability of local authorities and residents are still needed.

Viet Nam is one of five countries suffering the most serious consequences of rising sea water and climate change.
More than one-third of the delta – which accounts for nearly half of the country’s rice production, 65 per cent of aquaculture, and 70 per cent of fruit cultivation – could be submerged if sea levels rise by one metre, scientists have warned.

Source


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Bird Flu Deaths Reported in Vietnam, Cambodia

VOA Breaking News

A Vietnamese duck farmer has become the first person to die of bird flu in Vietnam in nearly two years, while another death from the disease was reported in neighboring Cambodia.

Vietnamese officials said Thursday the 18-year-old farmer from the southern Mekong delta died after reporting a high fever and respiratory problems. Investigators have not determined whether he was infected by his flock.

Meanwhile, Cambodian officials said a two-year-old boy also died of the avian influenza on Wednesday after being exposed to sick or dead poultry.

The virus usually only infects humans that come into direct contact with diseased birds.

Since the H5N1 strain of avian influenza was first detected in 2003, it has killed at least 340 people worldwide.

At the peak of the outbreak in 2006, the virus had spread to 63 nations, before it was eradicated in most of those countries due to a mass culling of domestic poultry.

The virus has killed 17 people in Cambodia and nearly 60 in Vietnam. Human bird flu cases have recently been reported in China, India, Indonesia and Egypt.

Some scientists fear H5N1 could mutate into a form readily transmissible between humans, with the potential to cause millions of deaths.

Source

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Portland State University researchers expose environmental costs of building Mekong River dams

Scott Learn for The Oregonian

When Robert Costanza and colleagues traveled to Laos earlier this year, the decision to build the lower Mekong River’s first mainstream dam seemed close to done.

Then the researchers, most from the Northwest, pointed out the poor history of predicting environmental and social damage from big hydropower dams. Their study (check out interesting comments here-MouthtoSource) also put new dollar signs on the potential cost to the environment and traditional fisheries — figuring the net economic impact of a string of electricity-producing dams could range from a gain of $33 billion to a loss of $274 billion.

“There’s a pretty high probability that things are not going to go the way they had planned, given the history of dam projects worldwide and in the Pacific Northwest,” says Costanza, the study’s lead author and a sustainability professor at Portland State University. “All the evidence pointed toward their assumptions being highly optimistic.”

Last week, the Mekong River Commission recommended Laos postpone dam building, citing the need for further study of the “sustainable development and management of the Mekong River.”

Costanza’s study highlights the biological importance of the Mekong, painfully familiar to Americans during the Vietnam War. It also shows how PSU is brokering its sustainability reputation worldwide, with contributions from Costanza and other researchers at its Institute for Sustainable Solutions.

Costanza, 61, got the shoulder tap for the study late last year from U.S. Agency for International Development. After years of discussion, the foreign aid agency wanted a new look at costs and benefits of Mekong dams, which would affect Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam.

Costanza, who arrived at PSU last fall, was a logical choice. In 1997, he helped advance the notion of valuing the world’s environmental capital when he co-authored a study published in the journal Nature that pegged the value of global “ecosystem services” at $33 trillion a year, more than the world’s gross domestic product at the time.

In general, Costanza says, economists have downplayed the importance of maintaining the environment — say a wetland that helps with flood control, or a free-flowing river that supports indigenous fisheries and delivers nutrient-laden sediment to rice fields.
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“If you’re not making the environmental costs explicit, you could make the wrong decisions,” he says. “You don’t understand what you’re trading off.”

The Xayaburi dam, the first of up to 11 proposed for the lower Mekong, would be built in Laos, with power going primarily to Thailand.

The researchers traveled to Thailand and to Vientiane, Laos, last February, returning to Thailand in March and June. In Vientiane, they saw fishermen casting nets, people picking rice in fields fed by side channels, children crossing the river, low at the time, to get to sandbars for pickup soccer games. Fish make up about 70 percent of the protein intake in the region.

“It was pretty amazing,” says Ida Kubiszewski, an assistant professor at Portland State. “From young to old, life revolves around the river.”

Hydropower dams would provide badly needed revenue to Laos. The initial dam would have about the same electric-generating capacity as Bonneville Dam, the first of 14 federal dams in the Columbia and Snake river system.

China has built dams on the upper Mekong, and leaders in Laos consider dam building “an opportunity to become a power generation hub,” says Shpresa Halimi,a member of the study team and an assistant professor at PSU. “They’re also looking at it as a way to combat chronic poverty.”

Even with more realistic estimates of environmental and social costs, Laos would still come out ahead, the study concluded. But Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia could all lose, with foregone fisheries and altered wetlands a big part of the tab.

Proponents say passage facilities at the dams to help migratory fish — including the endangered giant catfish — can minimize damage, and aquaculture can compensate for lost fisheries.

That had a familiar ring to Peter Paquet, wildlife and resident fish manager for the Northwest Power and Conservation Council. Paquet, who was among the study group, has seen hundreds of millions devoted to correct problems with fish passage at Columbia dams. Performance of the Columbia’s aquaculture system, otherwise known as hatcheries, has also fallen short of predictions.

“You can’t go into a place like that and say, ‘Don’t do this,’ because they can turn around and rightly say, ‘Look what you’ve done,’” Paquet says. “We were trying to say, don’t make the mistakes that we’ve made, because fixing these things after the fact is hugely expensive.”

The Mekong hosts some 1,200 fish species, far more than the Columbia, Paquet says. Many are migratory, and none can jump up fish ladders at dams the way salmon and steelhead can.

Laos could still build the dam — the river commission’s opinions are just advisory. Costanza said he hopes the country’s leaders agree to delay the decision and study other carbon-free power, such as wind and solar.

Dam developers could be required to post bonds to cover a worst-case scenario, an incentive to keep environmental effects low. Or other countries in the region and international groups could pay Laos for foregoing the benefits of dam construction.

Costanza says the poor, particularly in fishing villages, could bear the brunt of unexpected damage.

“There’s always uncertainty,” he says. “The real question is who bears the burden. The way it’s setting up now, it’s the public that will pay.”

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Food security key issue in mekong dam debate

Not only is the waterway home to millions of people, but the freshwater fish it supplies is a major food source for the people of four different countries

Op-Ed for the Bangkok Post

The ministerial meeting to decide the fate of the controversial Xayaburi hydropower dam in Laos ended last week without a clear decision on whether member states of the Mekong River Commission (MRC) would oppose the project.

This could open the way for the Lao government and the Thai construction company Ch Karnchang to continue work on the dam without facing the criticism that it has breached the 1995 Mekong Agreement which requires consensus from its member states: Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos.

The ministers, after a three-day meeting in Siem Reap, Cambodia, concluded that further study on sustainable development for the Mekong and the likely impact of dam development was needed. They said they would approach Japan to help with the task.

It sounds like a wise decision, and was praised by several experts at the Mekong Forum, which was being held in Phnom Penh at the same time. Nearly 200 experts had gathered to come up with recommendations on how best to balance development and conservation to ensure sustainable development for the region.

But the MRC’s decision raises questions about how seriously Mekong River countries are taking steps to ensure that development will be in harmony with the millions of people who earn their livelihoods – mainly from fishing.

For years, experts have studied the health of the Mekong ecosystem and discovered that it has played a significant role in the richness of biodiversity of river species. However, unlike the Amazon, which is the world’s most biologically diverse river, the areas around the Mekong are densely populated.

Dr Eric Baran is a senior scientist of the WorldFish Centre, which helped conduct the project’s environmental impact assessment and developed the MRC’s environmental assessment for hydropower development on the Mekong. He says that food security is the most critical issue.

”The combination of a high proportion of migratory fish and high dependency of people on river fish is unique, making the Mekong a place where dam development is most critical to regional food security,” he said. ”So it is not just about environmental conservation and displaced villages. The issue is much bigger than that. The trade-off between hydropower development and regional food security in the Mekong is probably unique in the world.”

Dr Baran, along with other scientists from the centre, has been studying fish in the Mekong for years. They have discovered that the Mekong has 781 fish species, second after the Amazon, which has 1,217. Dr Baran believes that the Mekong has more species, as 28 new one have been discovered, on average, each year during the past decade. Mekong fishermen catch about 2.1 million tonnes of fish each year, around one sixth of the world’s freshwater catch.

Communities in Lao’s mountainous areas, Thailand’s Northeast, Vietnam’s south and all of Cambodia depend the most on fishing for their livelihoods.

In Cambodia, studies have found that freshwater fish account for 90% of the country’s total fish supply, and 81% of its protein supply.

According to Dr Baran’s studies, more than one third of the 2.1 million tonnes harvested each year are migratory fish that need to travel to feed and breed. Dams will block that migration.

One scenario in the MRC’s environmental assessment shows that if all 88 dams are built, by 2030 up to 81% of the Mekong Basin will not be accessible to migratory fish. But scientists also agree that the dam projects can possibly coexist with other activities essential to people’s livelihoods.

To lessen the impact, one of their suggestions is to build the dams on the river’s tributaries instead. Also as the river tends to be more biologically diverse downstream, it would be preferable to build the dams upstream.

Dam planners also need to be more adaptable.

While dam developers tend to build dams for optimum use, Dr Baran says they need to strike a compromise in their designs to ensure that the river’s other possible uses are not impeded.

The height of dams should not exceed 30m to allow the construction of effective fish passes. According to his team’s study, the Xayaburi dam would block migration of at least 70 fish species.

He also suggested constructing dams on man-made canals rather than natural waterways to lessen the impact of these projects, a practice which has become common in Europe, especially France.

Dr Baran said that dams should be planned as multi-purpose structures and prior to them being built, a thorough assessment should be made of the trade-offs between power generation and environmental and social costs.

Due to the potential losses of food security and millions of people’s livelihoods, the Mekong countries made a wise decision last week to take a further look at sustainable development in the region.

It would also be wise for the dam developers and the Lao government to take a stand by stopping construction and conducting further studies of their own to ensure the project is in harmony with people’s lives.

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Mekong dam reprieve

Milton Osbourne for The Lowy Interpreter

At a meeting of the Council of the Mekong River Commission (MRC) in Siem Reap, Cambodia, yesterday the issue of whether or not Laos should be able to go ahead with its plan to build a major dam on the Mekong at Xayaburi was fudged, with the council members concluding that ‘there is a need for further study on the sustainable development and management of the Mekong River including impact from mainstream hydropower development projects’.

In effect, this means construction of the Xayaburi dam has been postponed for the moment.

The anodyne official statement glosses over the sharp divisions that have emerged and continue among the four member states of the MRC (Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam) on the proposed Xayaburi dam.

It is the first of many dams proposed for the Mekong after it flows out of China. With much preliminary work already completed, it is poised for construction work to begin across the river.

As planned, Xayaburi is no minor, ‘run-of-the-river’ dam. If built it would stretch 830m across the Mekong and rise to a height of 40m. Its reservoir would stretch back 60km (see my earlier post on the dam and the more detailed Lowy Paper, The Mekong: River Under Threat).

According to environmentalists, civil society groups and, most importantly, the governments of Cambodia and Vietnam, the Xayaburi dam is a ‘game changer’. Thailand has taken a hands-off position, not opposing the dam but saying it would hold Laos responsible if the dam caused problems in the future.

The concern has been, and will remain, that if Laos does ahead with Xayaburi it will only be a matter of time before other dams are built on the Mekong in Laos and Cambodia. The attraction of building dams that would generate hydroelectricity that could be sold for foreign exchange would be hard to resist. And if one is built, why not others?

There is almost universal agreement that if the Xayaburi dam is built it would serious negative effects on fish stocks, by blocking fish migration and by distorting the flow of water and sediment down the river, to the detriment of Cambodia and Vietnam. Yet Laos has seemed prepared to ignore the concerns of the critics, including its MRC partners. Most surprisingly of all, Laos seemed ready to incur the wrath of Vietnam, its long-term ally.

Whether this reflects the role China now plays as a supporter and donor is at the very least an open question. Just how long this Perils of Pauline-type saga will continue is impossible to predict, but what is clear is that, when it comes to dams on the Mekong, it is hard to make any judgments that do not take into account national self-interest.

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Dam controversy: Remaking the Mekong

Gayathri Vaidyanathan for Nature

Scientists are hoping to stall plans to erect a string of dams along the Mekong River.

This summer, a crew of strangers arrived in the tiny village of Pak Lan along the Mekong River in northern Laos. They sat around in shorts, examining technical drawings, and then surveyed the area, measuring the height of the riverbank, the size of the rice paddies and even the number of pigs.

The tally is necessary because Pak Lan may soon disappear. The government will need to move it and 18 nearby villages, because they will be partially or fully submerged if a highly controversial dam, called the Xayaburi, is built. The US$3.5-billion project will create a 60-kilometre-long reservoir and generate 1260 megawatts of power, which will earn between $3 billion and $4 billion a year for the developer, CH Karnchang Public Company of Thailand.

Somchit Tivalak, village chief and representative of the ruling communist Lao People’s Representative Party, is not quite sure what a hydroelectric dam is or how it will work, but he is convinced that good things are on the horizon. He says that his village will move to a place where it will have roads and electricity, as well as a reservoir teeming with fish.

Many others, however, are deeply worried. The lower Mekong, which winds through Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam, is one of the last big untamed rivers in the world. Nearly 60 million people depend on its rich fisheries for their survival. If the Xayaburi dam is built, it will set a precedent for 10 other hydropower dams proposed for the main stem of the river. If all those proceed, nearly 55% of the river will be converted to slow-flowing reservoirs.

Predicting the effects of such massive changes is impossible because the Mekong is one of the most poorly studied major rivers in the world. Taxonomists know so little about the fish there that they are discovering new species at an unparalleled pace. And governments do not consistently monitor water and sediment flows along the river.

In the case of the proposed Xayaburi dam, some scientists say the environmental impact assessment (EIA) conducted for the builder is seriously flawed because it does not consider the wider effects of the dam. “The EIA of the Xayaburi dam is the worst EIA that I’ve ever seen,” says Ian Baird, a professor of geography at University of Wisconsin–Madison who has studied the region for decades.

Cambodia and Vietnam, which researchers say will receive a disproportionate share of the harm from the dam, have both objected to it. And a scientific panel hired by the Mekong River Commission — a regulatory body made up of government representatives from Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam — last year recommended a 10-year delay on damming the river so that researchers could gather the needed data. But the Laotian government, which will receive up to 30% of the revenue, says that it will push ahead.

So scientists are rushing to assess how the dams will affect the Mekong’s fisheries and the flow of sediment that helps to sustain its vast delta. “The problem is, dams are coming very fast and are going to deeply modify the environment in a very short time frame,” says Eric Baran, fisheries researcher at the World Fish Center in Phnom Penh. “And the countries are not equipped to deal with that yet.”

Calming the waters

From its origins in the Tibetan plateau, the Mekong winds 4,800 kilometres down to the South China Sea, making it the longest river in Southeast Asia. At least 781 species of freshwater fish ply its waters, including four of the largest freshwater fish species in the world. The biggest of them, the endangered Mekong giant catfish (Pangasianodon gigas), can grow to be as long as a car.

Years of war, lack of investment, and drastic variations in flow between the wet and dry seasons have held back hydropower development and helped to keep the lower reaches of the river wild. But in the 1990s, Chinese engineers began a project to build eight dams and reservoirs on the Upper Mekong, which have evened out the flow.

Taming A River | The Mekong | Map by Nature.com

Taming A River | The Mekong | Map by Nature.com

With the Mekong suitably subdued and with the demand for electricity rising in the region, the Laotian government and private developers are now racing to put up dams, and Xayaburi is the first one to near construction. If it is completed, eight more are likely to spring up in Laos and along its border with Thailand, according to International Rivers, an environmental non-governmental organization based in Berkeley, California.

The EIA found that Xayaburi’s effect on fish, water flow and erosion would be minimal. Instead of creating a large standing reservoir behind a massive concrete wall, Xayaburi will have a smaller wall that will allow water to pass beneath it in what is called a run-of-the-river design. According to the EIA, the dam will “improve the overall natural fish production capacity on the Mekong River in the project area, especially in the dry season”.

But researchers have challenged that conclusion, noting that Xayaburi and most of the dams proposed for the river’s main stem will have concrete walls tall enough to raise upstream water levels by between 30 and 65 metres. Although smaller than conventional reservoir dams, the walls would still block sediment and migrating fish, says Tarek Ketelsen, a hydrologist at the International Centre for Environmental Management in Hanoi, Vietnam, which evaluated the Xayaburi EIA.

Critics also object to the fact that the EIA considers the potential effects only for a “downstream area about 10 kilometres from the barrage site”, according to the document. That is a remarkably small stretch of the river, say researchers. The EIA was conducted for Karnchang by TEAM Group of Companies, a conglomerate of consulting firms based in Bangkok. When contacted by Nature, TEAM said it could not discuss the EIA because of the terms of its contract with Karnchang. Karnchang did not respond to calls or e-mails requesting comment.

Fishing for trouble

Toun Neang, 52, gets up at 4 a.m. every day to go fishing on the Tonlé Sap Lake, which connects to the Mekong River in Cambodia. When he arrives, he offers incense, rice and beer to the spirit in the river. “If we forgot to ask permission or make an offer, that day we will not be able to catch even a single fish,” he says.

A fisherman since childhood, Neang has a keen eye for the migration cycles that bring fish into and out of the lake from the Mekong. Adult fish lay eggs far upstream, and then flooding during the rainy season brings those eggs and juveniles to the Tonlé Sap, he says. He worries about dams. “If the water is blocked, how can fish migrate downstream? And how can fishermen like us live if there are no more fish?”

The future of the fishery matters because the Tonlé Sap — one of the world’s most productive inland fisheries for its size — provides half of the protein consumed in Cambodia. “It is hard for people in Europe or North America to imagine the role that freshwater capture plays in terms of food security, economically and even culturally,” says Kirk Winemiller, a fisheries researcher at Texas A&M University in College Station.

Modelling the effect of Xayaburi and other dams on this fishery is difficult because researchers lack baseline data about most fish in the Mekong. Around 229 species live upstream of the proposed Xayaburi site, and 70 of them are migratory. In terms of biomass, about 60% of the total catch in the Tonlé Sap is made up of species that migrate long distances, some from as far up as the Xayaburi area, more than 1,500 kilometres upstream.

Many dams have built-in fish ladders that allow some migrating fish to pass. But researchers say the two ladders in Xayaburi’s design are not enough for the number of fish and the diversity of migratory species there.

Among them is the Mekong giant catfish, the river’s best-studied species and longest-distance swimmer. Zeb Hogan, fisheries researcher at the University of Nevada, Reno, spent years collecting fish and extracting calcified ear bones, called otoliths, from their heads. The otoliths grow a new layer each day, incorporating elements from the water, which creates a chemical record of a fish’s travels.

Otolith studies have shown, for example, that the tropical Asian catfish Pangasius krempfi makes an epic migration (Z. Hogan et al. J. Fish Biol. 71, 818–832; 2007). It starts life in the higher reaches of the Mekong, then drifts down to the coastal flood plains during the monsoon season. Adult fish live in the brackish waters of the delta and the South China Sea, but they fight their way back upstream to spawn at the beginning of the rainy season every year.

Michio Fukushima, a fisheries scientist at the National Institute for Environmental Studies in Tsukuba, Japan, and his colleagues at Ubon Ratchathani University in Thailand are trying to adapt otolith analysis to other species that migrate within the Mekong. Many of these species are commercially important, particularly the Siamese mud carp (genus Henicorhynchus), known as trey riel in Cambodia. This 15-centimetre-long fish is a major food source for larger carnivores. It is an important ingredient in fish paste and in feed used in aquaculture, and it is the most-harvested species in the Mekong.

Fukushima’s work has so far traced some of the riel’s migration routes. The fish he captured from the Songkhram, a Mekong tributary in Thailand, seem to mature in the main stem of the Mekong before returning to the tributary.

Baird says that the riel may become threatened in the Mekong as dams are built. “You start putting dams along the river there, it will stop migration for the fish,” he says. “It is hard to say exactly — will it wipe it out all together or reduce it in number? We haven’t faced this situation with such a highly abundant species.”

Even less is known about other fish in the Mekong. Fukushima and Baran are now creating an atlas of fish distribution, and Baran and others are modelling the effects of dams on fisheries. Preliminary runs suggest that if all the proposed main-stem dams are built, the region’s annual catch of 2.1 million tonnes will drop by somewhere between 600,000 and 1.4 million tonnes. “Six hundred thousand tonnes represents the whole annual freshwater fish production in West Africa”, says Baran. “That’s huge.”

Sedimental journey

The proposed dams will also exacerbate the Mekong Delta’s ongoing battles with the sea. The delta, home to 17 million people in Vietnam and 2.4 million in Cambodia, seems to be losing coastal land, says James Syvitski, a geologist at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Sea levels there are rising by 6 millimetres a year because of a combination of global ocean swelling and local changes. And the destruction of mangrove forests has left the delta prone to devastating floods and typhoons. In a study of deltas around the world, Syvitski and his colleagues declared the Mekong Delta “in peril”, noting that an area of nearly 21,000 square kilometres is already less than two metres above sea level (J. P. M. Syvitski et al. Nature Geosci. 2, 681–686; 2009).

The proposed dams are projected to accelerate the sinking by blocking the flow of sediment that would otherwise nourish the flood plains and build up the delta. Mathias Kondolf, a fluvial geomorphologist at the University of California, Berkeley, estimates that the dams in China and on the lower Mekong will block about half of the river’s sediment, which could be disastrous for the delta.

Some dam designs reduce the problem by incorporating wide, low-lying outlets that allow sediment to pass through. But these can compromise power generation, and might not let through the heavy sediment loads that would accumulate far upstream near the start of a 60-kilometre-long reservoir, says Ketelsen.

All these unknowns explain why the team of consultants assembled by the Mekong River Commission (MRC) last year called for a 10-year delay in building the Xayaburi dam, recommending that Laos start with smaller dams on tributaries. The MRC did not take a stand on the proposed moratorium and would not have the power to enforce it. But scientists say that the MRC does have the clout to influence the design of dams.

“Hydropower is important for the development of a country like Laos, and it does have a right to develop,” says Ketelsen. “However, when it comes to a river like this, which has a global significance in terms of biodiversity, you don’t have to start with the most high-impact projects”. The idea of waiting has gained some international support. The Asian Development Bank in Manila, for example, says that building dams on the main stem of the Mekong is premature because too little is known about the environmental and social costs.

Last April, Laotian authorities agreed to delay construction of Xayaburi until after conducting another project review, the results of which are due to be submitted to the four nations of the MRC in a final meeting in the next few weeks. But officials have said recently in media reports that they have completed the review and plan to go ahead with construction. The MRC is keeping silent, waiting for the Mekong nations to meet. Near the Xayaburi site in northern Laos, it does not look as though construction crews are waiting for the final meeting. Trucks are paving mud roads with asphalt — a necessary first step towards dam construction.

Downriver in Ubon Ratchathani, Thailand, Fukushima gets on a speedboat to collect fish, water and sediment samples from a dam on a Mekong tributary. For the past two years, he has travelled through Cambodia, Laos and Thailand by boat and by motorcycle twice a year to collect data. When he captures a fish, he performs a rough surgery, slicing open its head to extract otoliths for later analysis in his lab.

Fukushima says that before the dams become a reality, he wants to establish a baseline of environmental and ecological conditions and to try to work with developers so that future dams will cause the least amount of harm. He remains cautiously hopeful that science can make a difference. Looking out over the water, he says, “there must be some way we can move towards a better future”.


Gayathri Vaidyanathan is a reporter with Greenwire in Washington DC. She was previously an International Development Research Center fellow at Nature.

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