Mekong commission accused of ignoring own findings on dam impacts

An Dien for Thanh Nien News

Promoting decision-making not tantamount to project approval, counters commission

The Mekong River Commission seems to be acting beyond or even against its brief by encouraging decision-making on a major dam on the lower reaches of the river, critics say.

This, they argue, is tantamount to supporting the commencement of Lower Mekong Mainstream dams, ignoring the MRC’s own findings about the severe risks posed by such constructions.

The MRC, which comprises Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam, has also bypassed its role as an advisor to regional governments on sustainable use of the precious water source that the livelihoods of millions of households depend on, the critics add.

The Mekong River originates in the Tibetan plateau and flows 4,800 kilometers (2,980 miles) through Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, and Cambodia before emptying into the East Sea off Vietnam.

China’s dam construction upstream the Mekong River (known there as Lancang) has already altered the river flow and impacted downstream communities where no dams have been built yet, according to international non-governmental organizations (NGOs).

Meanwhile, downstream nations have their own plans to build dams to meet their energy needs, and concerned activists have been calling to defer 12 of them.

“Any dam built (on downstream sections) would cause irreversible changes to the river. By blocking vital fish migration routes and sediment flows, the dams will significantly alter the river’s rich biodiversity,” said Ame Trandem, the Mekong Campaigner for International Rivers, a US-based NGO which seeks to protect rivers and defend the rights of communities that depend on them.

“This will result in fishery losses, impacting the livelihoods and food security of millions,” Trandem said.

Shifting sands

At a meeting held late July in Laos on the Mekong Basin Development Plan, which provides various development option scenarios, the MRC appeared to favor the scenario to build six mainstream dams above Vientiane, Laos over the next five years.

“The [scenario] adds only six mainstream dams above Vientiane… This will not change the water quantity in mainstream or tributaries and thus the planned consumptive water use can proceed,” the MRC said in its draft Basin Development Strategy report.

“The countries consider that there may be possibilities to consider [this scenario]… provided that guidelines will be developed that bring localized impacts upstream and downstream of dams specifically into dam project feasibility and assessment procedures, and that strategic studies commence relating to fish passage technology for Mekong conditions and to the future of the Giant Catfish in both natural situations and breeding centers.”

This has drawn the ire of critics like the International Rivers Network.

“This recommendation clearly contradicts the findings of the [MRC’s] Strategic Environment Assessment, which points to the serious risks these dams pose to the Mekong and its people and the need to defer any decision over the dams for at least another ten years,” said Trandem of International Rivers.

The MRC-authored Strategic Environment Assessment’s June 2010 Avoidance, Enhancement and Mitigation Assessment report stated that “The decision to go ahead with the mainstream dams should be taken with the knowledge that the loss in biodiversity of the Mekong will be a permanent and irreplaceable global loss and that no adequate compensation can be provided.”

The absence of any “real discussion” about the Strategic Environment Assessment at the July meeting in Laos was also noted by critics.

“This was particularly worrisome given the MRC’s role to serve as an advisory body to the Lower Mekong countries,” Trandem said.

In response, the MRC asserted it had good reason for the approach it has taken.

“It is important to note that the Strategic Environment Assessment [SEA] process is not yet complete. The ‘impact assessment’ stage of the SEA and the ‘avoidance, mitigation and enhancement’ stage had been the subject of earlier multi-stakeholder workshops in the previous months,” said Jeremy Bird, Chief Executive Officer of the MRC.

The final SEA report will be published by the end of September, Bird added.

Double role

However, Trandem said that by pushing for the start of the regional decision-making procedures on the Xayaburi dam project at the July meeting, the MRC appeared to shed an objective approach.

The 1,260 MW Xayaburi project is located in northern Laos and is currently the most advanced mainstream project planned on the lower reaches of the Mekong.

According to the MRC’s 2010 SEA Impact Assessment, the Xayaburi project will inundate 10 villages and displace 2,151 people. It is also likely to impact millions more in the basin.

Bird denied any notions of the MRC adopting double standards.

“Promoting the [regional decision-making procedures on the Xayaburi dam project] is not equivalent to promoting the project itself – it is part of a wider and complex process involving national and regional considerations,” Bird said.

In July, the Thai developer and the Electricity Generation Authority of Thailand (EGAT) reached a tariff agreement on the Xayaburi project. The agreement was endorsed by the Laotian government.

“The tariff agreement is not a project approval either on the part of the Lao or Thai government, but does demonstrate a certain level of priority in the national planning processes being given to this project,” Bird said.

“It is clear therefore that the necessary documentation has been prepared to support a prior consultation process and hence we feel that it would be better to initiate that process soon so that the recommendations emerging from it can be fully taken into account and clarity on the views of the MRC’s four member countries can be obtained.”

But Trandem countered this by saying the decision on whether or not to approve the Xayaburi dam project should only occur when the Mekong countries are able to make informed decisions.

“The MRC’s decision [on] whether or not to initiate the regional decision making procedures should not be driven by the dam developers, but rather be based on having fully assessed and considered the regional implications,” Trandem said.

Bird admitted that the MRC, which is based in Laos, had not received any notification for the Xayaburi dam project from the Laotian authorities. The MRC will inform its member states upon receiving relevant information from Laos, he added.

Le Duc Trung, office manager of MRC Vietnam, also confirmed that the commission had not received any official information from the Laotian authorities with regard to the Xayaburi project.

The four member states would convene to discuss the impact of the dam on the Mekong River after being fully informed of project details, Trung said.

But he declined to comment on whether or not the Xayaburi project should commence.

“Unlike other NGOs, I am not in a position to oppose the construction of all dams.”

‘Seriously underestimated’

Experts have repeatedly warned that any Lower Mekong mainstream dam will carry important risks to food security, given its impact on fisheries and agriculture.

It is estimated that the Lower Mekong produces 2.5 to 3 million tons of fish annually. An important part of this production – between 600,000 to 1.4 million tons – would be at risk if Lower Mekong mainstream dams were constructed, they added.

“All impacts are incremental,” said Marc Goichot, Sustainable Infrastructure Senior Advisor to the World Wildlife Fund’s Greater Mekong Program.

“They will add to the impact of large reservoir dams in the Chinese part of the basin. You cannot look at impact of one hydropower project alone,” Goichot said.

“The risk to the Mekong Delta is seriously underestimated in the current draft of the [MRC’s] Basin Development Plan Assessment of the Basin-wide Development Scenarios. Impacts to the delta are a concern to millions of Vietnamese, and could significantly affect the agricultural productivity of the delta.”

Both Goichot and Trandem concurred that reformed energy planning and a comprehensive energy options assessment is needed in the Mekong region.

“By employing modern and more sustainable energy options, alternatives to the Xayaburi and other destructive projects can be identified and the Mekong can be preserved to allow for the security and continuity of future generations,” Trandem said.

[Ed-Apols for full quote]

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9 die, 300 others suffer from diarrhea in Cambodia

Deng Shasha for Xinhua

PHNOM PENH, May 23 (Xinhua) — At least nine Cambodians have died and about 300 others have been medically treated and hospitalized by diarrhea in Cambodia’s northeast province of Kratie, a provincial official said Sunday.

Chhneang Vutha, chief of Kratie provincial health department, told Xinhua by telephone from the province that at least nine people have died and about 300 others have been medically treated and hospitalized by diarrhea since March this year.

He said five districts in the province have been affected by the cause of diarrhea, and he attributed the deaths and suffering of the disease to lack of personal sanitation precaution as well as the lack of toilets in rural areas.

The first diarrhea case was reported in March this year during the dry season which normally begins from November through April.

Kratie is located about 320 kilometers northeast of Phnom Penh.

Recently, Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen has alerted his people to take more precaution on several causes including diarrhea and lighting that are harmful to human lives in recent months.

He, also, appealed to doctors and health officers around the country to provide more care to the people.

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Singapore sand demand damaging Cambodia environment

Dredging at dawn on The Tatai River, Koh Kong. Cambodia.

By Neil Chatterjee in Singapore, for Reuters

Singapore’s thirst for sand to increase land reclamation and construction is driving an ecologically damaging sand-dredging industry in Cambodia, according to a report by a non-governmental organisation.

London-based Global Witness said that Cambodia’s sand-dredging industry threatened endangered species, fish stocks and local livelihoods, despite the government’s May 2009 ban on sand-dredging.

“This situation highlights the continued failure of Cambodia’s international donors to use their leverage to hold the small elite surrounding the Prime Minister to account,” said George Boden, campaigner at Global Witness.

“Cambodia’s natural resource wealth should be lifting its population out of poverty.”

Koy Koung, the spokesman and undersecretary of state at Cambodia’s Foreign Affairs Ministry, said he was unable to comment as the government had not seen the Global Witness report.

The report said Singapore was the world’s largest importer of sand in 2008 and has used sand imports to increase its landmass by 22 per cent since the 1960s.

It said this development has wreaked havoc on the region’s coastlines, with Malaysia, Vietnam and Indonesia having all announced bans on sand dredging for export due to environmental concerns.

Global Witness said it had tracked boats being loaded with sand in Cambodia to their destinations in Singapore, a regional base for manufacturers and banks that is expanding its financial centre and leisure attractions onto reclaimed land.

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Visit The Tatai River in Koh Kong for more…

Backgrounder on The Mekong: Dam Locations and Status

It might be worth you familiarising yourself with the dam locations and the status of their development.

It’s worth a bookmark.

From Save The Mekong Coalition. Plenty resources here.

Save the Mekong Coalition

The Mekong River is under threat. The governments of Cambodia, Laos and Thailand are planning eleven big hydropower dams on the Mekong River’s mainstream. If built, the dams would block major fish migrations and disrupt this vitally important river, placing at risk millions of people who depend upon the Mekong for their food security and income.

Visit Save The Mekong Coalition Online

Thai PM asks China to help sort out Mekong problem

MCOT

BANGKOK, March 8 (TNA) – Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva on Monday asked China to determine whether dam construction in its reaches of the Mekong River is among the factors that may have led to the record-low water level downstream in the river, which is severely affecting not only Thailand, but other countries in the region, the Lao PDR, Cambodia and Vietnam.

The Thai prime minister discussed with Chinese Assistant Foreign Minister Hu Zhengyue regarding the severe drought conditions and the record-low water level in Mekong River.

Mr Abhisit has expressed concern over the problems and asked China to convene an expert meeting to establish the facts as to whether the record low level in the Mekong was caused by drought or by China’s dam construction as some critics have observed.

The information will pave the way for joint Mekong management through the existing regional mechanism, the Thai premier said. Thailand believes that China, which plays an active role in regional development, does not want to see downstream countries suffering from the problem.

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Cambodia’s Fortunes Ebb And Flow Along The Mekong

By Michael Sullivan

The Mekong River, one of the world’s longest waterways, has a long and turbulent history. From its source in China’s central highlands, it passes through six countries as it makes its way to the South China Sea — a journey of nearly 3,000 miles. In a five-part series, NPR’s Southeast Asia correspondent Michael Sullivan journeys the length of the river and tells the story of the people who live along its banks.

In Part 4, he reports from Cambodia, where the river has been central to the lives and livelihoods of many in a country that has seen its share of conflict.

Part Four – Cambodia: Fate Flows With The River

River dolphin deaths might be linked to gill net fishing: officials

KHOUTH SOPHAKCHAKRYA for The Phnom Penh Post

An Irrawaddy dolphin that was pregnant with twins was found dead on Saturday in Kampong Cham province, marking the second recorded river dolphin death this month, a conservation expert told the Post on Monday.

Touch Seang Tana, chairman of Cambodia’s Commission to Conserve Mekong River Dolphins and Develop Eco-Tourism, said the dolphin found on Saturday weighed 102 kilogrammes.

“We are very sorry because when we operated on her we found two children weighing about 1 kilogram each in her body,” he said.

“Generally, Cambodia’s Irrawaddy dolphins give birth between November and halfway through December, but this one is very strange,” he added.

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Cambodia and Vietnam sign treaty to boost river cruising

From etravelblackboardasia

Cambodia and Vietnam has signed a treaty that will allow freedom of navigation on the Mekong wat.

The treaty was signed on the first day of Vietnamese Party General Secretary Nong Duc Manh’s three-day visit to Cambodia.

The new treaty legally binds Cambodia and Vietnam to reducing the official restrictions that have existed for cross-border navigation, according to the Mekong River Commission (MRC).

“The Mekong and a range of other tributaries between Cambodia and Vietnam are now officially open.

“Now no one may legally stop river trade,” Mr. Mom Sibon, Secretary of State, Ministry of Public Works and Transport was quoted by the MRC.

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PM urges action on climate

Tuesday, 20 October 2009 | Cheang Sokha and Irwin Loy for the Phnom Penh Post

Speaking at the opening of the inaugural National Forum on Climate Change, Hun Sen said less-developed countries like Cambodia had been severely affected by climate change and lacked the resources to tackle the problem on their own.

“The rich countries should be more responsible, as they have more resources to settle this matter,” Hun Sen told several hundred forum delegates in a speech at Chaktomuk Theatre.

“Cambodia is not the country responsible for climate change but is the victim.… The huge countries should not blame less-developed countries.”

The premier struck a pessimistic note in his remarks, saying rising temperatures, shifts in rainfall patterns and surging sea levels would only continue to hit developing countries like Cambodia the hardest.

“As a nation based on agriculture, Cambodia is vulnerable to the effects of climate change,” he said.

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As the paint finally dries on The Prime Ministers two new enormous homes at Independence Monument, the most prestigious address in the Cambodian capital. The Prime Minister and his ‘cup of influence’ could do an awful lot to combat the effects of climate change themselves, rather than claiming that Cambodia is yet again, ‘a victim’.

Think massive capital (hydro) investment, logging and watershed and tell us it’s the ‘rich nations’ fault when the villages are washed away.

Referee!

Overloaded ferry kills 17 Cambodians in Mekong

PHNOM PENH (Reuters) – At least 17 people were missing and presumed drowned in Cambodia after an overloaded ferry sank in the Mekong river, officials said on Sunday.

The 14 women and three men were traveling to a local Buddhist temple to watch a performance in northeastern Kratie province, about 200 km (124 miles) from the capital Phnom Penh, when their ferry sank in a tributary late on Saturday in strong currents.

“They couldn’t wait to see the performance so they all got on the same ferry,” Som Sarith, chief of Chhlong district in Kratie province, told Reuters by telephone.

Authorities also removed at least nine motorbikes from the ferry, which went down in an area hit hard by recent flooding.

(Reporting by Ek Madra; Editing by Jason Szep)

[Ed- apols for full quote]

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