Mekong dam projects will cost more in damages, says MRC report

By Chularat Saengpassa and Pongphon Sarnsamak for The Nation

A recent report from the Mekong River Commission revealed that 12 dams in Lower Mekong River would cause serious problems for the two million people living downstream in Laos, Thailand and Cambodia.

The report entitled “MRC SEA for Hydropower on Mekong Mainstream, Impact Assessment and Discussion Draft” was presented at a regional meeting held to assess the impact of the Mekong River dam projects.

The report showed that if the 12 dam projects went ahead, it would adversely affect poor people living downstream in the three countries. These people live along the river in rural areas and depend heavily on agriculture and other natural resources for income.

According to the report, Laos will have a dam each in Pak Beng, Luang Prabang, Saiyaburi, Pak Lay, Latsua, Don Sahong and Thakho; the Thai/Lao border will have three dams, namely Sanakham, Pak Chom and Ban Koum; while Cambodia will have two dams, namely Stung Treng and Sambor.

The report showed that the Pak Chom and Ban Koum dams on the Thai/Lao border would affect 588,189 people living in Loei province, and 413,140 people in Ubon Ratchathani. It added that these dams would also change the boundary lines between the two countries.

Dam construction projects in Lower Mekong River would also have an adverse effect on the wetlands, ecological system and the economy. Damages to the wetlands would be to the tune of Bt224 million per year, the report said.

The report also showed that the 12 dams would stop 55 per cent of the river from flowing freely. The Mekong would become a huge reservoir and the dams will destroy natural islets, sandbanks and hamper the incubation of freshwater tropical fish and other aquatic animals. Plus the dams will affect Mekong’s more than 40 tributaries.

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Big is beautiful in Laos

By Brian McCartan for Asia Times

BANGKOK – Laos aims to lift itself out of least-developed country status by 2020, but a shift underway from reliance on Western aid to Asian private capital has sparked criticism from development specialists who believe the trend towards large-scale projects is unsustainable and works against the country’s long-term economic goals.

Lao Prime Minister Bouasone Bouphavanh announced new plans to increase foreign investment and reach annual growth rates of over 8% for the next five years at the “Future of Asia” business conference held in Tokyo in May. He said, “From 2011-2015 there are plans by our government to achieve economic growth targets of about 8% or more while at the same time maintaining our stability.”

Towards that end, he announced an overhaul of investment policies and said “we want to develop human resources to cope with this growth and, at the same time, care for and nurture our precious asset – the environment”. Bouasone reiterated the government’s fast growth strategy earlier this month at the World Economic Forum on East Asia in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, where he stated that Laos aimed for “no less than” 8% annual economic growth through 2015.

As part of that plan, the Lao government seeks to promote greater foreign investment in agriculture, electricity generation, alternative energy, hotels and tourism, and logistics and services. It is also promoting expanded investment in infrastructure as part of its plan to transform the country from “land-locked to land-linked” as a trade crossroads in mainland Southeast Asia.

Plans to open a stock exchange this year are also in the works. Officials hope the new bourse will help to finance a mounting mining and hydropower boom driven by foreign investment and a rebound in global commodity prices. The new bourse will be set up though a joint venture with the Korea Exchange and hydropower and mining companies are expected to be the first to list, followed by telecommunications and manufacturing firms.

The World Bank, in its mid-year Lao Economic Monitor, estimated that real gross domestic product (GDP) in Laos will increase from 7% in 2009 to 7.8% this year. The growth is mostly a result of rapid expansion in the natural resources sector, as well as steady growth in agriculture, construction and a rebound in the processing and tourism industries. The multilateral lender has forecast that Lao GDP will average 7.7% per annum between 2011 and 2015.

However, development experts are concerned about the country’s over-reliance on hydropower and other mega-projects to stoke growth

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Mekong Leaders Agree to Improve Cooperation on River

Daniel Schearf for VOA in Hua Hin, Thailand

Leaders of Mekong River nations meeting in Thailand have agreed to improve cooperation on using river resources.

The agreement comes after a severe drought dropped the Southeast Asian river’s levels to a 50-year low, raising pressure on China to provide regular information on its upstream dams.

Prime ministers from Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam Monday agreed that better cooperation is needed to balance the economic benefits from the Mekong River and protect the livelihoods of tens of millions of people.

Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva stressed the importance of joint responsibility in managing the river’s resources.

“And, such high level cooperation could not have come at a better time…

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For whom the mighty Mekong flows

Pianporn Deetes and Carl Middleton for The Bangkok Post

Since the end of last year, Jeerasak Intayos, a 38-year-old villager from Chiang Khong district of Chiang Rai, has seen the Mekong River’s level drop dramatically. Mr Jeerasak works with the Chiang Khong Conservation Group that has monitored the Mekong and its development for over a decade, and he has never seen the river this low. He witnesses first-hand how riverside communities are now suffering from declining fish catch, scarcity of water for drinking, irrigation and livestock, and how river transportation has been grounded, affecting tourism and trade.

The current drought is now widely declared as a water crisis by government officials in Thailand, Laos and China’s Yunnan province. And it is, but that’s not the whole story.

For Mr Jeerasak, the Mekong is not only drying up. Since the early 1990s, the river’s water level has been fluctuating unnaturally. Even recently in early March, at the height of the drought, the water level briefly rose by almost half a metre allowing the grounded Laotian boats to continue their journey towards Luang Prabang.

Without rain, Mr Jeerasak knows the Mekong’s waters must have been controlled upstream. Like other Mekong dwellers in Chiang Khong, he believes dams in the upper reaches in China have something to do with the changes of the Mother River.

China started operating its first dam – the Manwan dam – on the Lancang (upper Mekong) mainstream in 1992. The second and third dams, Dachaoshan and Jinghong, were completed in 2003 and 2008. In October 2009, China announced that its fourth dam, the massive Xiaowan dam, had started filling its reservoir.

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Doubts Hound World Bank-backed Dam as Its Turbines Start Up

By Marwaan Macan-Markar for IPS

BANGKOK, Mar 25, 2010 (IPS) – It has been just over a week since the turbines came to life at Laos’ largest hydropower project, but questions are already dogging this World Bank showpiece that marks the financial institution’s return to the business of big dams.

A leading environmental group has accused the Bank of failing to meet its obligations to help affected communities in the landlocked South-east Asian nation before the Nam Theun Two (NT2) project started supplying electricity to neighbouring Thailand on Mar. 15.

“Laos’ largest and most controversial hydropower project, Nam Theun 2, began full operation last week in violation of legal obligations to provide compensation and livelihood restoration to affected communities,” declared International Rivers, a global environmental organisation based in the U.S. city of Berkeley, in a statement this week.

“The irrigation system to help 6,200 resettled families in the uplands is not complete,” Ikuko Matsumoto, Laos programme director for International Rivers, said in an interview. “The soil is poor and the resettled farmers cannot grow their rice like they did before, when living close to the river.”

“This is a violation of the legal commitments made in the project’s compliance agreement,” she added. “There was an agreed time line that was legally binding to help the villages affected by the reservoir and the dam.”

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Nam Theun 2: Risky Business

[youtube width="598" height="482"]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qj5rHofPFGo[/youtube]

This video is about Laos’ largest and most controversial hydropower project, Nam Theun 2. Risky Business describes how Nam Theun 2 is affecting Lao villagers’ everyday life, including interviews with the affected communities. The video is produced by BankTrack and International Rivers based on a site visit in May 2009.

MORE INFORMATION:

Visit International Rivers’ Nam Theun 2 campaign page
Visit BankTrack’s Nam Theun 2 Dodgy Deal

CONTACT US:

Ikuko Matsumoto
[email protected]
+1 510-848-1155

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Drought brings severe hardship to riverside communities, demonstrates need for regional cooperation to protect Mekong River

Save The Mekong

March 14, is the International Day of Action for Rivers. As the Mekong suffers its worst drought in decades, painfully demonstrating the importance of the river to the region’s people, and revived plans to build dams on the mainstream threaten the river’s ecology and resources, this is a day to reflect upon the life-giving benefits that rivers provide, and to take action to protect the Mekong River for present and future generations.

Severe Drought

The Mekong River is facing an increasingly severe drought that holds serious implications for river-side communities and the wider population of the Mekong region. To date, the people of Yunnan Province of China, Eastern Shan State of Burma, North and Northeastern Thailand and Northern Lao have especially suffered. Fish catch has declined, water for irrigated agriculture, livestock and drinking has become scarce, and river transportation has been grounded, affecting trade and tourism.

The loss of fisheries, crops, livestock and drinking water has struck the livelihoods, food security and economies of some of the region’s poorest communities. In the context of the ongoing global economic crisis, these communities have few alternative means to see them through this disaster.

There is a high likelihood of far wider impacts throughout the Mekong basin, as the river is usually at its lowest in April and May. In Laos, river-side communities are already reporting scarcity of fish and lack of water for dry season, river bank horticulture. In Cambodia, the drought threatens the massive fisheries productivity of the Tonle Sap Lake, where the total fish catch each year is proportional to the extent of flooding, and is central to Cambodia’s food security and economy. In the Mekong delta in Vietnam, where over 10 million farmers and fishers live, saltwater intrusion threatens the farming and fisheries and has been reported in some places to have already extended nearly 60 kilometers in land, which is double the usual extent.

Mekong River Commission: Negligence

The Mekong River Commission (MRC) issued a statement on the drought on 26 February 2010, over two weeks after the media began reporting the severity of the situation. The statement attributes the exceptionally low Mekong River water-levels to a “drier than normal” wet season in 2009 combined with “a consistent pattern of monthly precipitation significantly below average amounts since September 2009” in Yunnan Province China, Northern Thailand and Northern Laos.

Given these apparently clear indicators foreshadowing the severity of the drought, available since at least September 2009, and that the MRC Secretariat is charged with monitoring this data, the MRC Secretariat’s failure to warn the public and instigate precautionary actions amounts to a serious negligence on its part.

This situation mirrors the earlier failure of the MRC Secretariat in August 2008 to warn with sufficient notice communities in Northern Thailand and Northern Laos whose livelihoods were devastated by the flooding. This failure was widely criticized by communities and NGOs at the time, and the recurrent situation indicates serious systemic incompetence within the MRC.

The Save the Mekong coalition remains disappointed over the MRC Secretariat’s poor record on transparency, access to data and belated action, now for the drought conditions as well as on the proposed Mekong mainstream dams, and calls for a public review of the MRC Secretariat’s performance.

China’s dams

The MRC has sought to exonerate China’s dams on the Mekong River’s upper mainstream (Lancang) from the severity of the drought in its reports and through the media. The MRC has taken this position despite the fact that neither China nor the MRC have publicly released data supporting this position. China began filling the reservoir of the Xiaowan Dam – the world’s highest arch dam and the fourth built on the Lancang – in October 2009. This timing, and the subsequent drop in downstream flows, coincides with the MRC’s identified onset of the drought.

It is not surprising that communities in downstream countries are suspicious of the Lancang dams’ contribution to the current drought. Changes to the Mekong River’s daily hydrology and sediment load since the early 1990s have already been linked to the operation of the Lancang dam cascade by academics. As a result, communities downstream in Northern Thailand, Burma and Laos have suffered loss of fish and aquatic plant resources impacting local economies and livelihoods. These dams in China have been built without consultation, apology, disclosure of data, compensation or restitution, all of which are now long overdue.

The first turbine of the Manwan dam – the first dam built on the Lancang – came online in 1992, coinciding with the 1992-1993 Mekong drought. Construction of the second Lancang dam was completed in October 2003, coinciding with the 2003-2004 drought. Construction of the third dam, Jinghong, was completed in late 2008. The Xiaowan Dam, presently filling its reservoir, has a reservoir capacity approximately five times larger than that of the combined storage of these three earlier dams.

The role that these dams played in earlier droughts has never been clarified or communicated; instead the facts have often been muddied. The Thai National Mekong Committee, for example, in a report this year on the drought identified the Manwan Dam to have started operation in 1994, rather than 1992, thus masking the potential implications of the dam during the 1992-3 drought.

The extreme suffering of the drought-stricken farmers in Yunnan province, China, is shared by fishers and farmers in Thailand and Laos. The Save the Mekong Coalition therefore makes a direct appeal to the Chinese Government to equitably share the remaining water resources between countries to alleviate to the extent possible the suffering of all river-dependent communities.

On 10 March 2010, the Bangkok Post reported that Chinese officials have invited the lower Mekong country governments to visit the Jinghong dam to inspect the water levels. In addition, the Chinese Embassy in Bangkok held a press conference on March 11 to state their position on the situation. The Save the Mekong Coalition welcomes these gestures of increasing transparency and disclosure.

The easiest and most accountable way for China to build trust with downstream communities and demonstrate that its dams are not compounding the impacts of the current drought would be to invite representatives of civil society as observers to the inspection trip to Jinghong, and to extend the trip to all four Lancang dam projects. Disclosure of all the data regarding rainfall, river and reservoir water-levels, and dam operation since the mid-1980s, when dam construction started, together with subsequent regular public reporting on dam operation and water levels, would build further trust with downstream neighbors. This should lead to negotiation with downstream countries over reparation for the project’s existing impacts and restitution to minimize future impacts.

Mekong Mainstream Dams: Threat to Ecosystems, Livelihoods and Food Security

In addition to plans for up to fifteen dams on the Lancang (upper Mekong) mainstream in China, the Mekong River is threatened by plans for eleven hydropower dams on the lower mainstream in Cambodia, Laos and Thailand which, if built, would have severe consequences on a regional scale. By blocking the river’s massive fish migrations, building these dams would place at risk the millions of people who depend upon the Mekong for their income, livelihood and food security. Experience around the world demonstrates that there is no way of mitigating such large dams’ impacts on fisheries. The Save the Mekong Coalition has consistently called for all actors to protect the Mekong River for present and future generations. We emphasize the importance of the river for the food security of millions of people throughout the region. Conveying this message, in October 2009, a 23,110 signature petition was sent to the Prime Ministers of Cambodia, Lao, Thailand and Vietnam. The petition was also sent to the Chairpersons of the National Mekong Committees (NMCs) of Cambodia, Lao, Thailand and Vietnam calling for a strong and trusted consultative process at the national and local level on development options for the Mekong River, which guarantees the participation of all riparian communities.

The present severe drought and the extreme floods of 2008 testify to the dynamic nature of the river, but also to its seasonal variation and the need for a far more cautious approach to human intervention in the river’s future. More dams are not the solution to a warming world. The Save the Mekong Coalition is very concerned about recent announcements by the Thai government that has sought to justify dam construction to fix the drought, including the Ban Koum and Pak Chom mainstream dams. Building dams on the Lancang-Mekong River’s mainstream will further undermine the river’s resilience. The Save the Mekong Coalition calls for a better approach that sustainably meets energy needs whilst at the same time protecting the region’s rivers.

Urgent Regional Cooperative Action Required

The severe drought highlights once again the importance of the Mekong River and its resources to all riparian communities that live along it, as well as the wider Mekong basin population.

Cooperation under the MRC has failed to ensure a coordinated and preemptive response to the drought. Under these exceptional circumstances, it is critical that the Mekong region’s governments, including China, proactively work together to share information and forge a cooperative response to work with riverside communities along the entire length of the river to minimize the drought’s economic, social and environmental costs.

For more information, please contact:

Pianporn Deetes, Living River Siam, Tel. +66 (0) 81-422-0111;
email: [email protected] ; www.livingriversiam.org

Montree Chantavong, Towards Ecological Recovery and Regional Alliance (TERRA)
Tel. +66 (0) 81-950-0560; email: [email protected] ; www.terraper.org

Carl Middleton, International Rivers, Tel: +66 (0) 84-6815332;
email: [email protected]; www.internationalrivers.org

The Save the Mekong coalition is a network of non-government organizations, community groups, academics, journalists, artists, fishers, farmers and ordinary people from within the Mekong countries and internationally. For more information on the coalition and the impacts of the planned Mekong mainstream dams in English and regional languages, please visit: www.SavetheMekong.org.

China denies hogging Mekong River water

The Bangkok Post

Drought, not dams, to blame, says counsellor

Claims that Chinese dams are causing severe drought along the Mekong River are groundless and inappropriate, Chinese government officials say.

The three Chinese dams built on the Mekong River had not affected river flows downstream, embassy counsellor Chen Dehai said in Bangkok yesterday.

China’s Assistant Foreign Minister Hu Zhengyue told Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva on Monday China’s dams were not a major cause of problems along the river.

China’s dams were blamed for unusual flooding along the Mekong two years ago and have been blamed for this year’s severe drought, which has hit fishermen, farmers and tourism operators in lower Mekong countries, including Thailand.

“Changes in the Mekong River have nothing to do with our activities,” Mr Chen said.

Only 64 billion cubic metres of water – about 13% of the water that feeds the Mekong – comes from China. The other 86.5% comes from the downstream countries, Mr Chen said.

He cited a statement from the Mekong River Commission (MRC) last week that low water levels in the Mekong River were the result of a drought in the north of Thailand and Laos.

“Statistics show that the rainfall volume in Thailand’s Chiang Saen district was measured at just 20 millimetres last December – lower than the average of 52mm,” he said.

Mr Chen said the drought had not only wreaked havoc in the lower Mekong countries but also many regions of China such as Yunnan and Sichuan.

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Drought affects countries along Mekong River

By Usa Pichai for Mizzima

Chiang Mai (Mizzima) – China has refused to release water from dams on the upper Mekong River, saying that there is a drought in Yunnan region even as lower Mekong countries suffer water shortage.

Abhisit Khampilo, Director of Chiang Rai Province’s Marine Transportation and Commercial Navigation Office said on Thursday that Thailand’s Marine Department has requested the Chinese government to release water from four dams on Mekong River in southern China to allow commercial boats to ply on Mekong because the water is shallow now.

“Chinese authorities have said they cannot release the water because Yunnan province is facing drought and they need to reserve the water for their people. They said that they had to wait for the rainy season,” he said, according to a report in a Thai news website Komchadluek on Tuesday.

Thai officials submitted the request letter in keeping with the agreement of the Joint Committee on Coordination of Commercial Navigation on the Lancang-Mekong River between China, Laos, Myanmar and Thailand, (JCCCN) signed in 2000.

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China asks Mekong states to visit dam

The Bangkok Post

Wants to counter claims that it’s causing drought

China has invited countries from the lower Mekong subregion to visit its Jinghong dam in a bid to counter claims that its poor water management is causing drought in downstream countries.

Kasemsun Chinnavaso, director-general of the Water Resources Department, said China had invited representatives from Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam and Thailand early this year to visit the Jinghong dam, one of four dams it operates along the Mekong River, but the trip was postponed due to cold weather.

The new visit is expected to take place this month.

“This is a very significant step for closer bilateral cooperation between China and members of the lower Mekong subregion for effective river management to deal with recent unusual drought and floods,” Mr Kasemsun said.

The downstream countries blame China’s dams for unusual flooding along the Mekong two years ago and for this year’s severe drought.

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