$26 mln grant agreed for Mekong major bridges, road

By Tuong Thuy for Saigon Daily

The Asian Development Bank said Wednesday that it approved a US$26 million technical assistance grant financed by the Australian Government for construction of two major bridges and a connecting road in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta.

The technical assistance is part of the Australian Government’s commitment to provide a A$160 million (US$171 million) grant to the Vietnamese Government over five years for the bridge and road project, as announced by Australia’s Prime Minister Julia Gillard during her official visit to Vietnam in October 2010.

This A$160 million investment represented the largest single Australian aid activity in Southeast Asia, the Australian Embassy Hanoi said while announcing the financing last October.

The project will build two large cable-stayed bridges and a 25-kilometer road connecting them. Each bridge is two km long, with a six-lane roadway 40 meters above the Mekong River.

The two bridges in Dong Thap Province are named Cao Lanh and Vam Cong, like the names of the two towns.

Australia’s grant contribution will help finance the engineering, design and construction supervision of the project, as well as provide a major contribution to the cost of building the Cao Lanh Bridge.

Meanwhile, the construction of the Vam Cong Bridge is supported by the Government of the Republic of Korea through a US$200 million loan agreement signed with the Vietnamese Government.

It is a co-financing effort on the part of the official development partners to Vietnam for this flagship project that is estimated to cost up to US$750 million.

Vietnam’s Ministry of Transport is the executing agency for the US$26 million technical assistance grant approved by the Asian Development Bank.

It is expected that the engineering designs and bidding process will be completed within 2012 and construction will start in 2013. The bridges and connecting road are expected to open for public use in 2017.

Once built, the bridges and road will benefit about 170,000 users per day and five million residents of An Giang, Can Tho, and Dong Thap provinces, according to the Australian Embassy.

The bridges and road will also improve transport services across and within the Mekong Delta region by connecting Ho Chi Minh City with other parts of the delta region Australia will invest over five years in a major road transport project in the Mekong Delta – Vietnam’s southern food bowl.

In 2000, the My Thuan Bridge over the Tien River in the delta, also built with Australian funding, opened to traffic, connecting Tien Giang and Vinh Long provinces and replacing My Thuan ferry services. The bridge now carries more than 5 million vehicles per year.

Source

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Innovative Tool for Mekong Basin-wide sustainable hydropower assessment launched

MRC

A breakthrough in sustainable hydropower development has been made with the launch of an innovative new assessment tool that helps identify, in as little as a week, the most sustainable sites, designs and operation rules for hydropower development in the lower Mekong River Basin.

The Asian Development Bank, Mekong River Commission (MRC) and World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) launched the Rapid Basin-wide Hydropower Sustainable Development Tool or RSAT.

“This is a breakthrough in sustainable hydropower development because it allows for hydropower projects to be assessed within the basin-wide context, rather than on a case-by-case basis,” said Marc Goichot, Senior Infrastructure Advisor for WWF Greater Mekong Programme.

“The sustainability of hydropower projects cannot be assessed in isolation from one another. Their cumulative impacts need to be considered and this is the only way to ensure the ecosystems and the services they provide are conserved,” he added.

Currently, there are over 100 hydropower projects proposed for the lower Mekong River Basin that encompasses parts of Lao PDR, Cambodia, Thailand and Viet Nam. The tool is to be used by stakeholders such as government agencies and regulators, river basin organizations, developers, financial institutions and civil society groups. The tool uses existing social, environmental, cultural, economic and financial information on a river basin to make the rapid assessment.

“Sustainable hydropower requires that decisions about its development and management are placed in a river basin perspective. This involves a shift in thinking about water infrastructure as a wider development intervention, with more attention to the overall development effectiveness of projects beyond viewing infrastructure narrowly as a way to meet growing needs for water and energy services. In the long term this will also lead to local and national economic benefits,” says Jeremy Bird, the chief executive officer of the MRC Secretariat, an intergovernmental organisation working on sustainable development of the Mekong River Basin.

The RSAT is designed to enhance existing tools and processes such as Environmental Impact Assessments and Management Plans, not to replace them. It works by bringing together different sectors and institutions and seeks integrated basin-wide planning and cooperation.

“Cumulative impact assessments are complex and time consuming to undertake and often difficult for all interested stakeholders to grasp the complete picture of the technical, environmental, social and economic issues in play. The RSAT enables the knowledge of many stakeholders to be captured so that hydropower investments do bring the positive outcomes needed by society to ensure everyone benefits. The RSAT tools help identify and communicate key actions to ensure these benefits are sustainable,” says Ian W Makin, Senior Water Resources Specialist, ADB.

The tool can be used in a number of different ways depending on the stage of planning or implementation, including as a checklist for preliminary assessments; a framework for risk assessment; to facilitate dialogue among different groups; to adapt management to changing contexts; identify capacity building needs; for training and as a skills development tool.

Specifically the tool is designed to assess existing and proposed cascades of hydropower projects within a sub-basin or multiple projects within a basin of a tributary; a single hydropower project and its relationship to a tributary basin; a sub-basin as a whole that has hydropower potential; and trans-boundary issues for basins shared by different countries, where hydropower is already developed or could be developed in future. The tool has been developed in the context of the Mekong River, but is equally applicable elsewhere in the world.

The basin-wide assessment tool complements and builds on a similar project based tool developed by a multi-stakeholder initiative, the Hydropower Sustainability Assessment Forum, and which focuses on the planning, design and operation stages of individual projects.

Financial support for the initiative has been provided by the governments of Germany and Finland and the USAID.

Source

More details on the workflow here:

http://www.mrcmekong.org/ish/SEA/RSAT-Revision-3-for-printing(OCT-3-2010)Corrected-FINAL.PDF

China Hydropower Dams in Mekong River Give Shocks to 60 Million

Yoolim Lee for Bloomberg

The Mekong River sparkles in the early morning sun as Somwang Prommin, a stocky fisherman wearing a worn-out black T-shirt and shorts, starts the motor of his boat. As the tiny craft glides on the river’s calm surface in the northeastern Thai district of Chiang Khong, Somwang points to a nearby riverbank. Three days ago, he says, the water levels there were 3 meters (10 feet) higher.

The Mekong, which translates roughly as “mother of the waters” in the Thai language, has become unpredictable since China started building hydropower dams and blasting the rapids upstream, says Somwang, 36, who’s been fishing for a living since he was 8.

In August 2008, there were devastating floods that reduced his catches and income, Bloomberg Markets magazine reports in its December 2010 issue. Early this year, he witnessed the most severe drought in his life.

Tens of millions of residents are experiencing similar currents of change along the 4,800-kilometer-long (2,980-mile- long) Mekong, which flows through six countries — Southeast Asia’s longest river.

From its source in the Tibetan plateau, the river traverses China’s Yunnan province, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam before pouring into the South China Sea.

Livelihood Threatened

The Mekong and its tributaries provide food, water and transportation to about 60 million people in Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam. Their livelihood is now threatened as their governments turn to hydroelectric dams along the river to generate power and create revenue.

China, hungry for electricity to fuel its breakneck growth, has already built four hydropower dams on the Mekong, completing the first one in 1993 without consulting its downstream neighbors.

As it prepares to overtake Japan as the world’s second- largest economy this year, China wants to almost double its hydropower capacity to at least 300 gigawatts by 2020 by building four more dams on the Mekong, called Lancang Jiang, or Turbulent River, in Chinese. That would give China 15 gigawatts of power on the river.

Those projects will have a disastrous impact on Cambodia and Vietnam, says Milton Osborne, a visiting fellow at the Lowy Institute in Sydney and a historian who wrote “The Mekong: Turbulent Past, Uncertain Future” (Allen & Unwin, 2006).

‘Selfish Lack of Concern’

“What the Chinese are doing shows a selfish lack of concern for the serious damage their dams will ultimately do to the downstream countries,” Osborne says.

Downriver, other countries are pursuing their own objectives. Communist Laos has proposed building 10 hydropower plants on the mainstream of the Mekong that will export electricity and transform the nation — one of Asia’s poorest, with a per-capita gross domestic product of $886 — into what the government calls “the battery of Southeast Asia.”

Cambodia plans to build two dams near the border with Laos. In all, 12 dams are planned by the countries below China along the mainstream of the Mekong.

More than 130 hydropower projects are either operating or projected for the river and its tributaries, according to the Mekong River Commission, the intergovernmental group known as the MRC.

Competition to exploit — or conserve — the limited water resources is creating tensions among China, the countries of the MRC and international environmental organizations.

‘Disaster for Fisheries’

“Dams would spell disaster for Mekong fisheries and ecology, a risk that millions of people in the region cannot afford to take,” says Aviva Imhof, campaigns director of International Rivers, a Berkeley, California-based nonprofit group that aims to protect rivers and human rights. “The Mekong mainstream should be off-limits to the region’s dam builders.”

The struggle to develop the Mekong mirrors those around the world where water resources are becoming increasingly scarce. The United Nations estimated last year that almost half the world’s population will live in areas of “water stress” by 2030 as a result of climate change, population growth and increased demand for food, energy and biofuels.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change — a group set up by the UN Environment Programme and the World Meteorological Organization — says the Mekong’s delta is one of the three on the planet most vulnerable to the impact of climate change, including rising sea levels, saline intrusion and storms that erode the coastline and undermine its ecosystem.

Mekong Delta

Building dams will worsen those effects, says Dekila Chungyalpa, director of the Greater Mekong Program at the World Wildlife Fund in Washington.

Building the proposed 12 mainstream dams with a total installed capacity of 14,697 megawatts would generate as much as $3.7 billion of annual revenue, according to the MRC’s report on the environmental impact of the mainstream dams in the lower Mekong, published this month. As much as 31 percent of the money would accrue to the governments of Cambodia and Laos.

Still, the dams would transform 55 percent of the downstream river into a reservoir, making it into a series of impoundments with slow water movement. The report, prepared by an independent consulting firm in Australia, recommended that MRC delay any decision on constructing the dams for 10 years.

The dams “have the potential to create transboundary impacts and international tensions,” the report says. “One dam across the lower Mekong mainstream commits the river to irrevocable change.”

‘Killing the Tree’

“It’s like cutting the trunk of a tree,” says Richard Cronin, director of the Southeast Asia Program at the Stimson Center, an independent research institute in Washington. “It will kill the tree.”

Chinese officials say they are aiding the environment, not harming it. Building dams “is an important step taken by the Chinese government to vigorously develop renewable and clean energy and contribute to the global endeavor to counter climate change,” Song Tao, the country’s vice minister of foreign affairs told a summit meeting of the MRC in April.

China aims to generate 15 percent of its power from non- fossil-fuel sources by 2020, up from about 8 percent now.

The most-controversial projects are the 4,200-megawatt Xiaowan dam in China, the tallest arch dam in the world, and the 1,260-megawatt Xayabouri dam in northern Laos, the first project proposed by the Laotian government to be built in the lower Mekong region.

Controversial Dams

The 240-megawatt Don Sahong, located in the Khone Falls area in southern Laos and 1 kilometer upstream of the Cambodian border, would block the area’s most important fish migration route, undermining fisheries-based livelihoods throughout the basin, environmentalists say.

“The Mekong is very much an interconnected system,” says Jeremy Bird, chief executive officer of the MRC in Vientiane, the capital of Laos. “If you intervene in one area, you see consequences somewhere else,” says Bird, whose office overlooks the river.

Spanning 14 kilometers at its widest point, the Mekong is home to more than 1,200 different species of fish — making it second in biodiversity only to the Amazon. They include endangered species such as the Mekong giant catfish and the Irrawaddy freshwater dolphin.

The lower Mekong basin is the world’s largest inland source of fish, accounting for almost 20 percent of the world’s freshwater fish yield, worth as much as $9.4 billion a year, according to the WorldFish Center, an international nonprofit research group based in Malaysia.

Source of Protein

Fish from Tonle Sap, a lake and tributary, and the Mekong, for example, provide more than 70 percent of the protein in the diet of Cambodia’s 15 million people.

Following the Mekong’s path downriver from northern Thailand to Laos and Cambodia by boat and car, it’s evident how everyday life is entwined with the river’s natural rhythm.

Mekong waters replenish crops, livestock and households and are used in recreation and transportation. People catch fish by the riverbank or on a narrow long-tail boat by using ubiquitous handmade nets or fish traps made of bamboo; women wash dishes and clothes; children swim, laugh and play. They don’t use any bait; they rest the net on the bottom for just a few minutes before scooping the fish that pass by.

In September in central Laos, a three-day festival is being held along the river to celebrate the annual dragon boat racing. Twenty men wearing bright yellow, orange, red, green and blue shirts row each of the five dragon boats.

Beer Lao, Algae Snacks

While loudspeakers blast local pop songs, children watch the race and men and women drink Beer Lao and munch on snacks of dried algae.

Until the 20th century, the Mekong River remained largely unchanged from the days when it was explored by the French Mekong expedition. Led by Francis Garnier, the team traveled up the river from Vietnam to southern Yunnan in 1866 and 1867.

Plans to develop hydropower along the river have ebbed and flowed since 1954, after Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia gained independence from France.

In the late 1950s, studies by the UN and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation proposed building dams that would help control floods, irrigate crops and improve navigation. Those plans were never carried out because the Mekong became the setting of the Vietnam War.

Greater Mekong Program

After the war ended in 1975, political turbulence in the region prevented any dam projects from proceeding until 1992, when the Asian Development Bank launched the Greater Mekong Subregion Program. Endorsed by the region’s governments, the program envisioned building a railway system, roads and bridges to connect the more than 300 million people who live around the Mekong. When the Asian financial crisis struck in 1997, those plans were halted.

Now the region is again growing rapidly, led by China, which expanded 9.1 percent in 2009 and an estimated 10.5 percent this year, according to the International Monetary Fund. That’s increasing pressure to develop hydropower resources.

“Water represents one of the great diplomatic and development opportunities of our time,” U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said at a speech in March marking World Water Day. Last year, Clinton established the so-called Lower Mekong Initiative as a way to address regional environmental challenges. The U.S. government plans to spend $22 million this year on environmental programs in Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam.

Record Drought

This year’s record drought has heightened tensions among the nations along the river. In April, prime ministers from the MRC countries held their first summit.

Chinese officials, who also attended the meeting, held at Thailand’s beach resort town of Hua Hin, told the conference that China, too, is suffering from drought.

Most rivers in southern China are at about 40 percent of normal levels, and more than 600 have dried up completely, leaving almost 20 million people short of drinking water, Chen Mingzhong, an official at the Water Resources Ministry, told the conference.

“As an upstream country with a high sense of responsibility, we do nothing harming the interest of riparian countries downstream,” Chen said. Chinese officials declined to comment for this article.

China has taken steps to strengthen its cooperation with the MRC in recent years, Bird says. At the height of the drought in March, China agreed for the first time to provide the MRC with dry-season data on water levels and volume from its two hydrological stations. It already had been sharing its data during the flood season since 2002.

Chinese Dams

In June, China, the MRC’s dialogue partner since 1996, invited officials from the four nations and the MRC Secretariat to visit the Jing Hong and Xiaowan dams in Yunnan province.

China says its dams are beneficial because they can store water for the dry season and control flooding in the rainy season.

The Mekong has three seasons. The cool, dry period runs from November to February. March and April are the hottest months, when Thailand, Laos and Cambodia celebrate the New Year.

Then the wet season begins. With the May monsoon the Mekong fills, expanding Cambodia’s Tonle Sap, or Great Lake, to more than five times its dry-season size of 2,700 square kilometers (1,040 square miles). By July, the Khone Falls in southern Laos — the widest waterfall in the world — is in full flood, turning its crystal-blue waters to muddy brown.

Vietnam’s Rice Basket

After September, the floodwaters begin to recede. The river flows into the Mekong Delta, allowing Vietnam to have three crops of rice a year.

Like the fishermen in northern Thailand who are experiencing the impact of the Chinese dams upstream, residents in the northern Cambodian province of Stung Treng are facing the consequences of a dam built in a neighboring country: Vietnam.

Bu Sonthana, who fishes and farms in the village of Banmai, says the local Mekong tributary started fluctuating erratically in 1996. Since then, flooding of the Sesan River has destroyed crops and the riverbank gardens where her village of 97 households grows tomatoes and tobacco during the dry season. Bu Sonthana, 59, says it was only in 2001 that her community learned Vietnam was damming the river 80 kilometers upstream.

By then, the $1 billion, 720-megawatt Yali Falls Dam had commenced full operation, according to Ian Baird, an assistant geography professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who has carried out research on transboundary impact assessment in the Sesan River basin. MRC data show hourly water level changes in the Sesan River of as much as 1 meter in January 2003.

Unpredictable Floods

Rainy-season flooding, to which communities have long been attuned, has been unusually severe and unpredictable since Vietnam began building the dam, Bu Sonthana says.

“It has become more difficult to catch the fish and farm,” she says, sitting on the dirt floor in front of her wooden shack with a dozen family members and neighbors. “We didn’t mind the floods before because they brought us a lot of fish and we knew the water would recede naturally. Now it takes many more days for the water to recede.”

Vietnamese officials didn’t respond to requests for comment for this story.

“The governments say they are building dams to alleviate poverty,” Baird says. “If you ask the local people, they don’t feel any richer. So whose poverty are they alleviating?”

Nam Theun 2 Dam

International agencies such as the ADB and the World Bank say Laos’s Nam Theun 2 hydropower dam, which started operating in March, is a model for how such projects can help eradicate poverty.

“It is probably the most scrutinized hydropower project to date,” Bird says. “To what extent the lessons from the Nam Theun 2 project will be incorporated to others — that’s the real test because it shouldn’t be seen as an isolated project.”

The model was long in the making. The Laotian government first targeted Nam Theun 2 and invited the World Bank to participate in the 1980s.

Some 27 Thai and Western banks and export credit agencies financed the project, which has cost $1.3 billion, slightly more than estimated, the World Bank says. The government formed a joint venture to operate the dam, Nam Theun 2 Power Co., whose shareholders include Electricite de France SA, which owns 35 percent, and Electricity Generating Public Co. of Thailand, with 25 percent.

In 2003, Thailand’s state-run utility EGAT agreed to buy power from the 1,070-megawatt dam.

Government Revenue

In June, the Laotian government received $600,000, the first revenue from exporting the dam’s electricity, according to a World Bank report. The government is set to earn an average of $80 million per year during the first 25 years of the dam’s operation, the report says.

About 6,200 villagers were resettled to make way for the reservoir the dam created. Some say their lives have improved. In Nong Boua, 60 kilometers from the dam, 63 households now live in wooden houses built on stilts along the road compared with shacks they lived in before with no roads.

“It’s nice to have a school and a clinic,” says a villager named Khammai. “But it’s become more difficult to irrigate the land.”

Downstream from the dam, where about 120,000 people live, villagers tell a different story. In Veun Sananh, a village of 76 families, a 45-year-old villager who only identified himself by his first name, Kham, says about 35 adults and children suffered from skin rashes after fishing in the river.

Officials from Nam Theun 2 Power visited the village in June with antihistamine creams.

Skin Rashes

In the nearby Boeung Xe village, a 54-year-old villager named Boun says 13 of the 350 people in his village had a skin irritation this year after bathing in the river.

Nam Theun 2 Power has been investigating the skin rash complaints and has brought in dermatologists and other experts to help, according to a company spokesman, Aiden Glendinning. About 4 to 5 percent of the total population of the affected areas suffered from rashes during the peak period of May, and about 20 cases remained as of mid-October, he says.

The company is also monitoring complaints about the fish catch, he says. The dam has increased the flow of water during the dry season.

“Some villagers who are used to catching fish by wading in shallow areas during the dry season will now find this practice more difficult,” he says. “Other people who fish from boats have reported increased fish catch.”

Cambodia

About 700 kilometers south of Nam Theun 2, the Mekong reaches Phnom Penh before flowing into the Mekong Delta and then spilling into the South China Sea. A bustling city of 2 million people dotted with temples and buildings from the French colonial era, the Cambodian capital, too, depends on the river for its livelihood.

“I’ve vaguely heard of some dams, but no one is really talking about it here,” says Pich Pov, 28, who operates a small cruise boat and lives aboard it with his family. “The Mekong is my mother. Everyone I know was born on this river, and she provides us with food and shelter.”

If China and its neighbors carry out all their dam-building plans, the Mekong may cease to be the nurturing mother of the waters for Pich Pov and millions more and instead be a turbulent river.

To contact the reporter on this story: Yoolim Lee in Singapore at [email protected]

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Laura Colby at [email protected]

Source

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Mekong Power Grid

International Rivers

For millions of people in the Mekong region, its bountiful rivers are a symbol of life that provide for fish, transportation, water for agriculture, and many other critical needs. Yet to a number of powerful energy companies, backed by the region’s governments and organizations such as the Asian Development Bank (ADB), these same rivers are a tempting resource to be exploited for electricity generation.

Since the early 1990s, the ADB has relentlessly promoted a regional power trading scheme. Under the Mekong Power Grid plan, a network of high-voltage transmission lines would open up Laos, Yunnan Province of China, and Burma to hydropower development to feed power to the energy-hungry cities of Thailand and Vietnam.

The Mekong Power Grid is a risky way to meet the region’s energy needs. Many hydropower projects built in the region during the last decade have left a legacy of damaged livelihoods, cultures and ecosystems. Some of the most controversial hydropower projects are proposed to connect to the grid, including the Tasang Dam in Burma, the Jinghong and Nuozhadu dams on the Lancang/Upper Mekong in China, the Nam Theun 2 Dam in Laos, and the Sambor Dam in Cambodia (see map).

In preparing the Mekong Power Grid plan, the ADB has failed to take into account the wide-ranging social and environmental impacts that would inevitably result from extensive hydropower development. It did not seek the opinion of the people of the region whose lives are dependent on the river’s resources and who would be affected. Despite the plan falling well short of international energy planning standards, the ADB continues to encourage the region’s governments to implement it.

Rapid economic growth in the Mekong region, especially in Thailand and Vietnam, has resulted in a ever-growing demand for more electricity. Fortunately, sustainable solutions to meet the region’s power needs do exist, including a high potential for energy efficiency, accompanied by numerous promising renewable energy options such as biomass, solar, wind and micro-hydro. Regrettably, the wide-ranging benefits of these options remain poorly recognized and therefore presently under-developed.

International Rivers is working with partners in the region to demonstrate the shortcomings of the ADB’s Mekong Power Grid plan and to promote better energy planning practices through which the value of sustainable energy options would become evident.

Source and links here…

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Laos earns first 600,000 dollars off controversial hydropower plant

EarthTimes

Vientiane, Laos – The Lao government earned 600,000 dollars off the Nam Theun II hydropower plant last month, its first revenue from the ecologically controversial project, project sources said Tuesday.

According to a joint report issued by the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank, two of the main sponsors of the 2-billion-dollar project, the Lao government received the money from the plant owners in June.

The payment came two months after Nam Theun II (NT2) commenced commercial operations.

The plant, located in Hinboun district, Khammouane province, was opposed by environmentalists and human rights groups concerned about the dam’s impact on downstream fisheries, watersheds and the relocation of 6,000 villagers.Laos, one of the world’s poorest countries, has few other sources of revenue other than hydro-electricity, which is exported to neighbouring Thailand.

Government revenues from the plant are expected to reach 6.5 million dollars by late September, the banks’ report said.
The money is earmarked to finance poverty reduction and development programmes in Laos, one of the World Bank’s conditions which has acted as a guarantor for loans to the project.

“With close to three quarters of the population of Laos still living on less than 2 dollars a day, the money generated by the NT2 is providing a significant boost to the country’s economy and helping improve people’s lives,” said John Roome, Word Bank Director for Sustainable Development in the East Asia & Pacific Region.

Over the 25-year concession period, the country will receive nearly 2 billion dollars in revenues from the project, which is jointly owned by consortium comprising Electricite de France SA (35 per cent), the Goverment of Laos and two Thai companies, the Electricty Generating Public Co (EGO) and the Italian-Thai Development PCL (ITD), each holding a 25-per-cent share.

[Ed-Apols for full quote]

Source

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Mekong Tourism Forum on the right trail

BY LUC CITRINOT for ETN

After a hiatus of three years, Mekong Tourism Forum has been successfully revived thanks to the strong will of the Mekong Tourism Office (MTO) with the support of various institutions such as the Asia Development Bank (ADB), the Royal Government of Cambodia, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, PATA, or USAID-funded ASEAN Competitiveness Enhancement (ACE). Some over 170 attendees came during the two-days session. And for Mason Florence, MTO executive director, the outcome of this first forum organized by his office has been more than positive.

“The Mekong ‘brand’ is really appealing and consequently generates interests from both consumers and the trade. We then recorded a high interest from people coming from all horizons such as NTOs, government bodies, NGOs, but also tour operators, hoteliers, and media. I find it even more encouraging to see an increasing number of local people being part of our discussions and panels. It is great to see this new generation being more and more active in all aspects of the civil society,” Florence said.

The Greater Mekong sub-region, with its rich cultural heritage and its dramatic landscapes, is likely to continue to pull in more and more travelers. “From 2004 to 2009, travelers to the area [have] grown from 20.5 to 25 million. And we predict a further rise to 26 or 27 million annual visitors by 2012,” indicated Greg Duffell, PATA CEO.

The theme of the forum, “New Roads, New Opportunities,” highlighted the benefits to tourism occurring from the development of new road corridors linking the region. “The time is right for inspirational and innovative cross-border tourism ideas that utilize the new road links,” explained Florence. Corridors now link the GMS on a north-south axis and west-east axis. From Bangkok, accessing Siem Reap for example takes only five hours.

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Government Power Policy should be rethought, report says

From The Cambodia Daily and published via Probe International

“I think we need to question how big institutions like the ADB and World Bank can support decentralization” in Cambodia, he said.

NGO Forum Director Chhit Sam Ath said: “We organized this workshop to give attention to alternative, decentralized power that has less impact [than hydropower] on the environment and rivers, and Cambodian people.”

“The government needs to explore the option.”

Many argue that hydropower projects planned for Cambodian rivers risk wiping out fisheries and the livelihood of local communities as water flow and water quality is negatively affected and fish are prevented from migrating downstream.

Asked if energy technology such as solar systems or biomass power generation could substitute the huge amount of electricity generated by hydropower projects, Mr. Sam Ath said: “It’s important to think: Why do we need the power? Only for Cambodian people themselves or to export to other countries?”

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A Citizen’s Guide to the Mekong region: Oxfam

12 Nov 08 | Oxfam, Australia

The Asian Development Bank needs to be far more accountable for projects that damage the lives of some of the poorest people in Asia according to a new Oxfam Australia report.

The report is aimed at citizens of countries in Asia where the bank operates and provides advice on holding the bank to account.

Oxfam Australia will launch A Citizen’s Guide to the Greater Mekong Subregion at the Mekong Public Forum at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok at 12.30pm on Wednesday, 12 November.

Oxfam Australia has found that despite the Asian Development Bank’s claims that its Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) Program has led economic growth and poverty reduction in the region, many of the poorest people are worse off than ever before. …

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ADB Providing $20M to Develop Tourism in Greater Mekong Subregion

ADB | MANILA, PHILIPPINES

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) is providing $20 million for the development of the tourism sector in the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) to help create more jobs for the poor while protecting the environment, ethnic groups, and minorities.

The project will benefit nine provinces in Lao People’s Democratic Republic (Lao PDR) and five provinces in Viet Nam, which were selected for their high tourism potential and poverty rates. The project areas form part of the priority zone under the GMS Tourism Sector Strategy 2006-2015.

ADB will provide a $10 million loan to Viet Nam and a $10 million grant to Lao PDR to cover most of the project cost of $21.98 million. Viet Nam will contribute $1.11 million and Lao PDR $870,000 to complete the funding requirement.

The project will support the construction of handicraft markets, viewing points, small access roads, walking trails, tourism signages, information and visitation centers, parking areas, small river piers, community lodges, and sanitary facilities.

It will also support preparation of plans for tourism site development and management, training for local communities and private tourism operators, development of marketing strategies and products, and production of tourism manuals.

The project will promote strong and fair partnerships among local governments and communities and the private sector in developing, operating, and maintaining community tourism facilities.

In 2007, the GMS received 25.6 million international tourists, generating $18.85 billion in earnings and providing employment to 3.74 million people. From 1995 to 2007, international tourist arrivals to the GMS rose at a yearly average rate of 8.12%, more than twice the world average. Its share of world tourism rose to 2.9% from 2.2% during the period and its share of the Asia and Pacific region’s tourism increased to 14% from 11%.

“The contribution of tourism to the GMS economy has increased significantly in the past decade, creating new opportunities for economic growth and poverty reduction,” said Alfredo Perdiguero, Senior Economist of ADB’s Southeast Asia Department.

But the fast and unmanaged pace of tourism expansion has prevented many poor from reaping the benefits and limited development to just a few destinations.

New opportunities resulting from the development of transport corridors have also not been fully tapped, while small- and medium-sized businesses have not been able to provide the quality of service demanded by tourists.

Furthermore, the public sector has been unable to ensure the sustainable growth of the sector, while preserving the natural, cultural and urban heritage, which are under threat. The project will contribute to heritage conservation through the development of sustainable tourism that will benefit the poor.

The Greater Mekong Subregion is composed of countries sharing the Mekong River – Cambodia, People’s Republic of China, Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Myanmar, Thailand and Viet Nam.

Source: ADB

Cambodia’s Poorest Families to Receive Emergency Food Assistance

ADB | PR

MANILA, PHILIPPINES – The Asian Development Bank (ADB) will provide Cambodia’s poorest families with $35 million in emergency food assistance as they struggle to cope with rising food and fuel prices.

Poor families living around the Tonle Sap Lake, and in Phnom Penh’s urban slums, will receive free rice and other food subsidies. Food will also be provided to poor children attending early childhood learning centers and primary schools.

ADB assistance will foster employment through food-for-work programs, and impoverished farmers will receive seed and fertilizer to boost crop yields.

“ADB’s assistance will help half a million of Cambodia’s poorest people stave off hunger,” said Arjun Goswami, ADB’s Country Director in Cambodia.

Over the past year rice prices in Cambodia have doubled, the price of meat and fish has risen 30 to 50 percent, and farmers have been hit hard by a doubling of fertilizer prices.

Many impoverished families are selling their household assets and taking out high interest loans in order to purchase food, fueling a downward spiral of poverty.

“Cambodian households normally spend 60 percent of their income on food, so rising food prices have had an absolutely devastating effect on the country’s poorest families,” said Mr. Goswami.

One in every three children in Cambodia are undernourished, and the current food crisis is increasing the severity and scope of the country’s child malnutrition problem.

“ADB’s assistance is particularly focused on protecting Cambodia’s children from the ravages of malnutrition, which can impair their physical and mental development and cause a range of health ailments,” said Mr. Goswami.

ADB’s emergency food aid package consists of a $17.5 million grant and an additional $17.5 million loan being provided at concessional rates.The Government of Cambodia will provide a further $5.08 million for the project.

Broadcasters interested in obtaining video interview footage of ADB’s Country Director in Cambodia, Arjun Goswami, along with B-Roll footage, please contact Multimedia Team Leader Jason Rush: [email protected], mob: +63-920-938-6490. High quality jpeg photos are also available.