Mekong countries trapped by Thai crisis

Don Ross for TTR Weekly

Thailand’s neighbours fear a prolonged political crisis will negatively impact on their tourism industries according to tourism leaders attending the Mekong Tourism Forum late last week.

Addressing more than 170 travel industry delegates, government officials from five Mekong region nations said they were monitoring the situation in Bangkok, as a prolong conflict would damage tourism across the region.

Bangkok is an important hub for tourism to Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia. Officials pointed out Vietnam could rely to some extent on Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh airports based on the recent expansion of Vietnam Airlines’ international network through the two cities. However, disturbances in Bangkok, and the subsequent travel warnings, cut lucrative tour itineraries that combine Thailand and Vietnam.

“But overall, Mekong region countries are concerned about the Thailand situation,” said the Mekong Tourism Coordinating Office director, Mason Florence.

“If it fails to stabilise then as a region we need to take steps to secure travel flows to the other member countries.”

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France grants 800,000 EU to build capacity for scientific analysis

Lao Voices

(KPL) A new initiative across the Mekong region will conduct research and build capacity for assessing one of the most fundamental ingredients that supports the abundance of the Mekong’s aquatic resources-sediment flows.

Sediment flows are essential for ecosystem habitats, as sources of nutrients for fish and other aquatic species and for the stability of the Mekong Delta, said the Mekong River Commission (MRC).

The work will also improve assessments of how any proposed dam developments on the mainstream and tributaries would affect bank erosion, river bad levels and alter the flow of sediment in the river over coming decades.

The recently inaugurated MRC sediment management initiative, which is being supported by over 800,000 euro provided by the government of France over three years, will help the MRC Member Countries of Cambodia, Lao PDR, Thailand and Vietnam to develop systems for measuring sediment transport and deposition, as well as studying the river beds, banks and reservoirs, and flood zones.

The funding provision was signed at the MRC on 22 April among Representative of Agence Francaise de Developpement (AFD) in Lao PDR, Mr. Guy Francois, Ambassador of France in Lao PDR, Mr. Francois Senemaud and the MRC’s Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Jeremy Bird.

“Coming years may bring changes to the river system, through for example climate change, land use changes and proposed hydropower schemes on the Mekong,” said Jeremy Bird, CEO of MRC Secretariat. “We know from other parts of the world that changes in river morphology can be detrimental, but although we already have a great deal of knowledge about river flows, fisheries and other aspects of the river system, we still do not fully understand the role that sediment plays in this important ecosystem and how changes will impact on river beds, deep pools in the river used as refuges for fish in the dry season, other river in habitats and the very productive Mekong delta and its coastal fisheries.”

“This project will improve the MRC’s ability to use scientific knowledge to inform Mekong government’s decisions, by helping the MRC and Member Countries to bridge that knowledge gap and build capacity for assessing the expected impacts.”

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Mekong Tourism Forum Confirms Top Speakers

MTCO in Bangkok

BANGKOK, 27 April 2010 – The Mekong Tourism Forum has confirmed a compelling list of speakers to address its theme for 2010, “New Roads, New Opportunities.”

Tourism ministers, director generals, travel industry CEOs and leading private sector and development minds will address current and future challenges and opportunities facing tourism in the Mekong region. The Forum takes place in Siem Reap, Cambodia, 7-8 May 2010.

High profile speakers include H.E. Dr Thong Khon, Minister of Tourism of Cambodia, Mr Luzi Matzig, Group CEO, Asian Trails, Mr Pradech Phayakvichien, former Governor, Tourism Authority of Thailand, Mr Bill Black, Managing Director, Altiva Hospitality, Mr Tran Trong Kien, Founder and CEO of Buffalo Tours Vietnam, Ms Chananya Phataraprasit, Chairperson, Asian Oasis, Mr Inthy Deansavan, Managing Director of Green Discovery Laos, and Mr Greg Duffell CEO of PATA, to name a few.

One of the highlights will be “In Conversation with Lim Neo Chian”. In this session Yeoh Siew Hoon, Editor & Producer of WIT-Web In Travel will interview the former CEO of the Singapore Tourism Board, who will share Mekong-region travel encounters from his 2009 “ASEAN On Wheels” 4-wheel drive adventure. He will highlight the opportunities that he sees for Mekong tourism growth in the years ahead.

Other top level session moderators and controllers, such as Ludwig Rieder of Asia Pacific Projects, Mr Don Ross of TTR Weekly, and Mr Tith Chanta, Director General of the Ministry of Tourism Cambodia, will define and direct the debates at the Forum.

Opportunities and threats will be analyzed against a backdrop of growth. “Tourism demand for Mekong region destinations is storming ahead,” said Mr Mason Florence, Executive Director of the Mekong Tourism Coordinating Office in Bangkok. “We need to work together to make sure development is fair and sustainable and that we remove obstacles to growth and poverty alleviation.”

With new road corridors opening much of the sub-region, there will be sessions on “Pioneering Mekong Tourism Products,” “The Path to Community-based Tourism,” “How Sustainable Tourism Can Drive Profit,” and “The Road Ahead.”

Government speakers will update the audience on visa regulations, border crossing changes, airport developments, and new policies and incentives for the tourism sector.

For the full program showing all speakers, visit here.

The Mekong Tourism Forum 2010 is open to all. Registration (only US$50; PATA members US$30) can be done online at www.mekongtourismforum.org.

For further information email to: [email protected] or call the Mekong Tourism Coordinating Office at: (+66) 2-612-4150.

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 brushes off accusation on dams’ effect

The Nation

Senior Chinese and Thai officials brushed off claims yesterday that Chinese dams had dried up the Mekong River, saying China had only a small proportion of water flowing into Southeast Asia’s longest river.

Chinese Assistant Foreign Minister Hu Zhengyue told Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva during a meeting at Government House that Chinese dams on the upper Mekong in Yunnan province made no significant impact on water flow into the lower part of the river, according to an official at the meeting.

Beijing and local administrators paid a lot of attention to drought within the region and China would not do anything to damage mutual interests with neighbouring countries in the Mekong, Hu was quoted as telling Abhisit.

The PM told Hu people living in the lower Mekong region were worried about the drought as they had no clear information about the dams in China. It would be useful if there was a forum for experts to share information, he said.

“China plays a significant role in regional development and I believe China does not want to see people in the lower Mekong basin in difficulties,” Abhisit was quoted as saying to Hu.

Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya, who met Hu separately, said countries in the lower Mekong should not blame China for the drought since 35 per cent of the river’s water supply came from rain in Laos. The dams in China held only 4 per cent of total water in the Mekong, he said.

“We should not blame each other but should find ways to cooperate with China for water management of the Mekong,” Kasit told reporters.

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China’s PR Problem Rears Head at Mekong Forum

Analysis by Johanna Son for IPS

CHIANG MAI, Thailand, Dec 12 (IPS/TerraViva) – Powerful neighbour. A rising power. Old friend. Big, secretive investor. Big boy of the region. These were some of the terms participants at the just-finished Mekong Media Forum here used, when asked to share the images of China they get from the media.

At a talk-show discussion here, several participants said they had mixed feelings about the country that is the big power in the Mekong region, among the biggest investors in their countries and has built three dams on the upper reaches of the Mekong River.

“There are two Chinas,” said Cambodian journalist Nguon Serath, editor of ‘Rasmei Kampuchea Daily’ newspaper. One is the country that has put in the biggest investments in Cambodia and “that is a good picture,” he explained.

The second is the builder of dams in the Mekong river – the Manwan, Dachaoshan and Jinghong dams and some more to come – that has sowed discontent among communities in downstream countries of Lao PDR, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam and triggered letters of protest from grassroots groups.

These comments, which came up again and again through the different sessions at the four-day forum, reflect the depth of resentment by neighbouring countries that see China as having run roughshod over their concerns about the impact of its dams on water levels of the Mekong River, salination, worsening floods and their livelihoods. Some 60 million people in lower Mekong basin rely on the river for food, transport and water.

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JAPAN: Fresh Aid to Mekong Signals Rivalry with China — Experts

By Catherine Makino for IPS

TOKYO, Nov 11 (IPS) – There is more to Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama’s pledge last week to extend at least 500 billion yen (5.6 billion U.S. dollars) in fresh assistance to the Mekong region than meets the eye, or so observers think.

Japan’s underlying intentions toward the Asian economies, especially in the Mekong delta regions, have not changed significantly, said Tomohiko Taniguchi, a foreign policy analyst and professor at the prestigious Keio University.

What has changed is that there is now a sense of urgency and crisis among many Japanese bipartisan policy makers that the Mekong sub-region is going to be a “playground” for the Chinese, he said.

The strategy of the new government, which was swept into power in September’s landslide election, is to build the Asian community like the European Union, he added.

“Unless Japan and other like-minded democracies do the job, it will be carried out solely by their giant neighbor, the Peoples Republic of China,” said Taniguchi “But rarely will Japan state its true intention.”

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Habitat For Humanity Kiwi Teams Leave For The Mekong

From Voxy News in New Zealand

143 New Zealanders leave Auckland this Friday to go to Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand and China to help build 162 homes in 5 days, joining 3,000 volunteers from around the world. The Jimmy & Rosalynn Carter Work Project (JRCWP) is a catalytic kick start event leading to the building of fifty thousand homes for the poor in the Mekong area in the following five year period. Previous Carter Work Projects have led to a tenfold increase in the number of houses Habitat is able to build annually in the host country, through increased awareness and involvement of governments, corporations and high profile individuals.

The Mekong Region is home to some of the poorest families in Asia. Nearly one third of the population (80 million out of 250 million) live in deplorable poverty, surviving on less than a dollar a day. In Phnom Penh, Cambodia Habitat will be resettling families who have been living and working in a rubbish dump, to a new area including a community centre, medical clinic, and microfinance supported small business opportunities. Just outside of Hanoi, Vietnam, families who live in crowded conditions on their small fishing boats, using the same river water for cooking, bathing and toilet, will be resettled to new homes that are land based communities.

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Japan to give $5.6 billion aid for Mekong region

VNBusinessNews.com – Japan offered on Friday more than 500 billion yen ($5.5 billion) in aid over the next three years to Southeast Asia’s emerging Mekong River region countries, where it seeks more influence and investment opportunities.

In recent decades, Japan has been the biggest outside source of aid to the sub-region, but China’s global quest for resources, and its outward investment drive of the past decade or so, have enlarged Beijing’s presence in Southeast Asia.

Tokyo, keen on the region viewed as strategic for its proximity to shipping lanes and abundant natural resources, is hosting the first leaders’ summit with five Mekong region countries — Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam — in Tokyo to discuss sustainable development and climate change.

“Japan wants to play a more active role in contributing to the stability and development of the Mekong region,” Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama was quoted by a government official as telling his counterparts at the summit, which started on Friday evening.

“We want to act as a bridge for the common future of prosperity,” he added.

The new pledge of official development assistance meant Japan’s government under Hatoyama, who took power in September, would maintain around the same level of aid to the region for the next three years, the official told reporters.

Around 80 percent of the 500 billion yen aid will be in the form of yen loans, he added.

Hatoyama also vowed at the summit to strengthen Tokyo’s assistance to improve infrastructure, customs, and distribution systems in the Mekong region, the official said.

The leaders will further discuss issues such as climate change challenges and boosting exchanges with Japan on Saturday, when they will issue a joint declaration on their cooperation after the two-day event.

[Ed-Apols for full quote]

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Civic Groups Press to End Hydropower Development on Lower Mekong River

By Ron Corben | Bangkok

The environmental group, Towards Ecological Recovery and Regional Alliance, collected more than 20,000 signatures asking governments to abandon plans to build dams along the lower Mekong River.

The petitions are to be presented to the leaders of Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, which share the river with Thailand. The activists have asked Thailand’s government to abandon the projects.

“Our main concern is that if the Lower Mekong mainstream dams happen the fishery for the whole Mekong region will be blocked and fishery is a very thing – it is out of concern that if that [occurs] it will destroy the livelihood of millions of people in the region,” said Premrudee.

More than 60 million people in Southeast Asia are dependent on the Mekong River for fishing. The river starts in Tibet and runs 4,800 kilometers through China and Southeast Asia.

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