“Development is for other people”

China Dialogue

Fishermen and rice farmers in Cambodia’s Ratanakiri province don’t want dams, electricity or even compensation, argues Zhang Hong. They just want to preserve their way of life.

In the Cambodian province of Ratanakiri – bordering Vietnam to the east and Laos to the north – local people are fighting to protect their rivers from hydroelectric dams, and their lifestyles from disruption. In early August, I spent two days in Ratanakiri at the invitation of 3SPN, a local NGO focused on the “three Ss”: Srepok, Sesan and Sekong, all tributaries of the mighty Mekong.

Founded by Cambodians, 3SPN aims to bring together communities in this north-eastern region of Cambodia to campaign for the rivers and the livelihoods that depend on them. Joining me on the trip were journalists from Hong Kong, Vietnam and Korea – all home to companies that have built or are planning to build hydroelectric dams here. 3SPN wanted to show these reporters the impact dam construction has on local lives.

On our first day in Ratanakiri, we travelled to the village of Thmey, outside the provincial capital of Banlung. Lying on the Srepok River, Thmey has neither electricity nor running water. The village is home to 899 people, divided between 178 households. It has four television sets and a collection of radios – some of the richer families have small generators to provide electricity.

Through a translator, village head Sela Ratha told us that people here mostly make a living through fishing and rice farming. Any surplus fish can be sold and the income used to buy new fishing equipment or other goods.

Downstream Cambodia is often affected by dams built beyond its borders. Even if upstream nations carry out environmental and social impact assessments on their dams, they rarely consider what will happen over the border, much less provide compensation for people living there. Several years ago, Vietnam built a dam on the Srepok, which the fishing communities of Thmey say has made their lives more difficult.

The villagers complain that the dam causes unpredictable changes in water level – meaning their nets are never in the right place. They set the nets up, then come back the next day to find that they’re hanging above the water or are completely submerged, or even that they have been swept away. Via the village head, they have asked the Vietnamese to keep them informed about their dam operations, but by the time they get the phone call, the flood peak has already passed.

The dams also block the path of migrating fish. In the past, a 100-metre net could catch 20 kilograms of fish in an evening. Now, it’s only two or three kilograms. Water quality has also declined, as vegetation submerged by the dam waters rots. Reduced flows have also increased sedimentation, and the Srepok is turning into another “Yellow River” (which contains more sediment than any other river in the world).

The villagers know there’s not much that can be done about the dams Vietnam has already built – they are more worried about one due to be constructed right next door. At the end of last year, a team of Chinese workers suddenly appeared and started drilling bore holes in the rice fields by the river. Their translator told the locals that they were carrying out a geological survey as part of proposals to build a dam. The villagers say they were never informed about the project, let alone consulted. Even the village authorities didn’t know about it.

With help from local NGOs, the villagers found out that, in 2008, the Cambodian government signed a memorandum of understanding with Guangxi Guiguan Electric Power on the construction of two hydropower dams on the Srepok River, with generating capacity initially planned at 300 megawatts and 100 megawatts respectively.

“We don’t want dams,” a villager told me. On January 11 this year, they put this message in writing to the village and district governments – but have received no response.

Is it really true they don’t want dams under any conditions? Although I knew the villagers had strong objections to dam development, I thought that they would be asking for reasonable compensation and minimisation of the environmental and social impacts, for talks and hearings – I didn’t expect their attitude to be so absolute.

The first reason the villagers give is this: they don’t want electricity, nor do they want hydroelectric dams. What use is electricity to this primitive fishing and farming village? Even if they wanted it, neither the government nor the company plans to give it to them – there’s no distribution network. The power from the dam will go to industry in Phnom Penh, Cambodia’s capital, or be exported to Vietnam. The locals will pay with their homes, but get nothing in return.

What if the government gives them adequate compensation? The villagers answer that they might get a one-off payment, but that won’t help their children and grandchildren. The dam will flood fields and fishing will be even harder. With no livelihoods, what use will the money be? The villagers also feel certain the government and the Chinese company will not be generous: they didn’t tell the locals about the agreement with the electricity company or the feasibility study, so it’s clear that they don’t see any need to consider them.

The villagers also report that, this year, the government leased a nearby parcel of land to a Cambodian company to use as a rubber plantation. That land included some of their rice fields, but no compensation was paid. Events like this are common in Cambodia, and the villagers are worried they will keep happening.

I asked people here if they would be prepared to go and work for that company – it’s a job, after all. The response was a forceful “No!” The translator summed it up: “They would rather work for themselves.”

As in many parts of the world, villagers are facing modern realities of land acquisitions by private companies and have no choice but to sell their labour on the open market.

I started to understand why, to the people of Thmey, development isn’t a priority – for them, development is something for other people; they don’t get anything out of it.

The next day, we went to Padal Thom, near the border with Vietnam. This is a Jarai village, with a population of 552, living in 103 households. The people here are even poorer, and even more dependent on fishing than in Thmey. The village used to get everything they needed from the Sesan River, but Vietnam has built five dams upstream and there are no longer enough fish – when there’s not enough to eat, the villagers have to take a one hour motorbike ride to the border with Vietnam to buy more. When Typhoon Ketsana struck in 2009, the Sesan River experienced a rare flood, which carried away the village’s livestock and poultry. The villagers believe the size of the flood is related to the dams upstream.

The villagers here are equally firm: no dams, even if there is compensation.

These people live in a “pre-capitalist” era, and are accustomed to traditional farming and simple living. They think their descendants can maintain the same lifestyle and see nothing wrong with it.

The Jarai are animists, and that’s another reason they don’t want to move – this is the place where generations have made sacrifices to the gods and their ancestors, and they need to stay within its protection.

Some might call this “ignorant”, even “backward”. But who are we to say the lifestyles others choose aren’t as good as ours, or that we must “help” by giving them “more advanced” ways of working and living? Surely that’s the same attitude adopted by Europeans arriving in Africa and Asia in the nineteenth century.

I tried to look at it from the point of view of the government and investors: without industry, Cambodia will always be at the end of the global value chain – and, with less than ideal energy resources, hydropower is the only way out. There’s no alternative but to sacrifice the interests of a few for the sake of the many.

But, in this case, do the benefits for the many really outweigh the costs for the few – including the environmental costs and future risks that haven’t been calculated? I’m not sure, but I know that for these villagers who know nothing but farming and fishing, relocation might mean hunger and disease. Have the many thought how to repay the few? Have the Chinese companies, who think all they need to do is reach a deal with the Cambodian government, heard their pleas?

A Cambodian working for an international research institution, told me that there are good dams and bad dams. The World Commission on Dams has a set of detailed guidelines: if you follow these closely, you can maximise the benefits and reduce the negative impact. But those guidelines aren’t compulsory, and many nations, especially developing nations, don’t use them in their own projects. Even in the European Union and United States, where they are followed, new issues often arise after construction, and dams remain controversial.

So is the villagers’ stance – no dams at all – too extreme?

“It’s because they don’t have very good information,” said the NGO worker. “Some environmentalists just tell them about the disadvantages, but not about the advantages – and the disadvantages aren’t always there.”

“So . . .” he paused. “You need the best researchers mediating between the government and the environmentalists. We won’t tell the government not to build dams – on the contrary, we’ll tell them when you build a dam, you need to do this and this.”

Zhang Hong is European correspondent at Caixin.

A longer version of this article first appeared on the author’s Caixin blog.

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Posted in Cambodia, community fishery, fish, hydropower, research, The Srepok River, tributary of The Mekong river, Vietnam | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Power projects hit by drought

Viet Nam News

DAK LAK — Many small and medium hydropower plants in the Central Highlands do not have enough water to operate efficiently although the rainy season is about to end.

Most hydroelectric companies in Dak Lak complain production has reached only about half of their targets because of the drought-like weather conditions.

Some small plants had to shut down temporarily to accumulate enough water, they said.

There are four hydropower plants on the Serepok River – the Buon Tu Srah Hydropower Plant with a 520 million cubic metres reservoir in Lak District; the Buon Kuop Hydropower Plant in Dak Lak Province’s Krong No District; Dray H’Linh, Serepok 3 Plants in Dak Nong Province’s Cu Dut District and Serepok 4 in Buon Don District, Dak Lak.

Tran Van Khanh, director of the Buon Kuop Hydropower Company which operates the Buon Tu Srah and Serepok 3 plants, said the extended drought resulted in record low water levels in the Serepok River. He said the Buon Tu Srah Dam, whose reservoir can hold 520 million cu.m of water, had just around 60 million cu.m water.

This was the lowest since the plant was inaugurated in September 2009. Inadequate water in the Buon Tu Srah Reservoir has caused downstream hydropower plants to operate perfunctorily because upstream reservoirs have to accumulate water, he said.

Khanh said the State had assigned his company to provide 1.28 billion kWh of power this year, but it has only been able to produce 480 million kWh, about 38 per cent of the year’s plan.

“Compared with the same time last year, this is a record low water level. The rainy season in the Central Highlands often ends in November, but there is not enough water to operate the plants even now. With this situation, I am afraid the company will not reach 50 per cent of the target,” Khanh said.

An official who works at the Buon Tu Srah Reservoir said last Friday that the dam could not accumulate enough water and the plant had to stay idle at daytime.

The Krong No River in Dak Nong Province is no longer fierce and deep as it used to be, and a drop of several dozen meters in water levels in the dam is clearly visible.

Ho Van Bay, deputy secretary of Duc Xuyen Commune’s People’s Committee, said water levels in streams that linked to the Krong No River were so low that people could walk to the other side.

Nguyen Van Than, director of the Dak Lak Electricity Company, predicted that the situation would worsen in the coming months.

Water levels at the Ialy Hydropower Plant on the Se San River in Gia Lai and Kon Tum Provinces have also been reported at critically low levels and output capacity of the dam is said to be at 50 per cent.

Ta Van Luan, director of Ialy Hydropower Company, said the company’s production in the first eight months of this year has reached 50 per cent of that assigned by the Viet Nam Electricity Corporation. — VNS

Source

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A Strategic Framework for Water Resource Management in the Sre Pok River Basin

The absolute necessity of effective water resource management in the Sre Pok River Basin has never been clearer than it is now. With recent droughts and floods, we realise that we can no longer treat water in the way many of us have in the past. The Government of Vietnam and the four provinces of the Sre Pok, supported by the Danish Government through Danida, is working towards putting in place improved institutional arrangements and planning methods and tools to achieve a more integrated, participatory and sustainable approach to water resource planning and management.

The Strategic Framework for Water Resources Management in the Sre Pok River Basin has been developed for, and in consultation with, the newly-established Sre Pok River Basin Council, and is an important first step in developing a more comprehensive river basin plan.  It provides a framework for a partnership between the community and the government in managing, using and conserving the water resources of the basin.

We face challenges in how we improve water resource management within the basin, as well as how we fulfil our obligations, beyond its boundaries, to neighbouring Cambodia and the Mekong River region. No longer can we be solely focused on our own development needs.

We see that we need to play an active role in supporting national laws and policies, including the National Water Resources Strategy, while at the same time paying due attention to the people of the basin.. Our water resource practices must minimise our local environmental impacts and support the achievement of other national objectives such as economic and social development.

Securing a sustainable future for the Sre Pok River Basin and its people will depend on our ability to implement the best possible water resource management practices. The challenge of providing long-term certainty of clean water supplies and a beautiful environment will require many improvements to the way we use water.

This strategic framework is a significant contribution to addressing these challenges. The implementation of the strategies it contains over the coming years will provide an opportunity for the provinces to continue to work with the community to address the many issues that confront sustainable use of our water resources.

We all have a stake in making these strategies become a reality.

Strategic Framework for WRM in Sre Pok

Lak lake in the Srepok basin

Lak lake in the Srepok basin

Lak lake in the Srepok basin
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Integrated Water Resources Atlas of Srepok basin

Water resources include rain water, surface water, ground water, and sea water. Surface water is all the water on the surface of the Earth and thus includes the water in lakes, marshes, glaciers, and reservoirs (man-made reservoirs), water from rain, snow, rice fields and ice. Water from rivers is the main and the most important resources which is used popularly in living and production.

The Srepok River Basin located in the Central Highland of Vietnam which is in an important strategic location in both socio-economic and defense-security terms, with advantages for developing large-scale agricultural and forest goods production in combination with processing industries, and developing energy sources and mining industry. Through implementation of strategies and plans the Central Highlands can become a wealthy, economically strong driving economic region. Assessement of water resources and effective utilization and exploitation of water resources in the Central Highland is crucial as variability of climate, temperature and regular occurance of flood and droughts in the recent years have impacted on dvelopment.

Management of water resources is a critial factor in achieving sustainable economic growth in the argricultural, industrial and other services sector in the Srepok River Basin. Population growth, urbanization and industrialization have increased the pressure on the country’s water resources, causing water scarcity, competition between water users, water pollution, salinity intrusion, watershed degradation and increasing flood damage in the recent years. Poor people suffer the most under these conditions and the environment is subject to serious degradation. In response to these problems in the water sector, the Vietnamese Government adopted Law on Water Resources in May 1998. This Laws establishes a number of specific institutions and instruments for water resources management.

Sub-Component 3.1 will assist the Government of Vietnam (GoV) to implement sustainable water resources management in the Sre Pok River Basin, putting in place an important part of the national framework for the water sector and implementing key provisions of the Law on Water Resources at the river basin level. Importantly, it will provide support for the establishment of a River Basin Organisation (RBO) for the basin, an important institutional development, which will facilitate a more co-ordinated and effective approach to water resources management. The sub-component will also support the RBO, the national, provincial and district agencies to develop the capacity to carry out key functions in water resources management at the river basin level.

The objectives for Sub-Component 3.1 are set out in the Sub-Component Description. The Development Objective – that is, the long term goal – is:

“Improved living conditions in the Srepok River Basin achieved by sustainable management and development of the water resources”.

The Immediate Objectives of the sub-component are:

1.   “Srepok River Basin authorities functioning with adequate capacity to implement sustainable integrated water resources management by month 48.”

2.   “Sustainable management practices for water resources infrastructure demonstrated for replication throughout the Srepok River Basin by month 48.”

The output 1.2 defined by the Sub-Component Description as follows:

“An effective data and information system for water resources management at river basin level established by month 24.”

Atlas of Integrated Water Resources in the Srepok River Basin is one of outcomes of this output which developed on GIS, ARC-GIS 9.1 software, including socioeconomic, hydrometeorological, agricultural and forestry data. This is useful data to support the RBO to perform function of water resources planning in the basin and used to provide inputs for planning and model suite development in the basin.

The Atlas includes data, as follows:

1.     Topography

2.     Basin administrative map

3.     Sub-basins boundaries

4.     Land use 2003

5.     Soils

6.     Status of irrigation schemes in the basin 2005

7.     Groundwater in the basin

8.     Forest coverage 2004

9.     Hydrological network

10.     Meteorological network

11.     Average annual rainfall

12.     Average annual potential avapotranspiration

13.     Average annual temperature

14.     Average annual sunshine hours

15.     Annual runoff modulus

16.     Annual maximum discharge modulus

17.     Agricultural water use, irrigation and drainage chemes

18.     Population densities 2004

The Atlas was prepared by: Dr. Geoff Wright (Consultant’s Team Leader), Ph.D Candidate, Msc. Pham Tan Ha (Deputy Team Leader),  B.E. Nguyen MInh Anh (GIS Expert),  SIWRM Project.

Integrated Water Resources Atlas of Srepok basin_Part1

Integrated Water Resources Atlas of Srepok basin_Part2

Integrated Water Resources Atlas of Srepok basin_Part3

Integrated Water Resources Atlas of Srepok basin_Part4

Integrated Water Resources Atlas of Srepok basin_Part5

Integrated Water Resources Atlas of Srepok basin_Part6

Integrated Water Resources Atlas of Srepok basin_Part7

Integrated Water Resources Atlas of Srepok basin_Part8

Integrated Water Resources Atlas of Srepok basin-Complete Document (10mb)

Giang Son Bridge in the Krong Ana river (Srepok tributary)

Giang Son Bridge in Krong Ana river

Giang Son Bridge in Krong Ana river

Posted in The Srepok River, tributary of The Mekong river, Vietnam | 1 Comment

Srepok RBO & IWRM in The Srepok Basin

Presentation from Mr Pham Tan Ha, Dak Lak province at the 3rd Regional Stakeholder Forum on Mekong Basin Development Plan.

29-30 July, 2010, Don Chan Palace, Vientiane, Lao PDR

Download the pdf here

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Fish stock in northeastern Cambodia to be sustainably managed by local people

WWF

On 11 June, 2010 Mondulkiri province’s Fisheries Administration Cantonment officially transferred management rights of the Sen Kangha Community Fishery to local Indigenous people living along the Srepok river in Koh Myeul Leu and Koh Myeul Krom villages of Koh Nhek district. Representatives from both parties signed a three-year long agreement aiming at sustainable management and use of local fishery resource.

With support from WWF, the signing ceremony was organized by the Fisheries Administration Cantonment at their office in Sen Monorom town and was attended by 60 participants from the Provincial Governor’s Office, Fisheries Administration, Sen Kangha Community Fishery, WWF and many other local authorities.

His Excellency Chan Yieun, Governor of Mondulkiri, who presided over the ceremony, encouraged effective implementation of the agreement and urged all members of the Sen Kangha Community Fishery to sustainably manage and conserve fish stocks for long term benefit.

“I would like to ask all relevant authorites, especially the Fisheries Administration Cantonment, to cooperate with and provide support to the Sen Kangha Community Fishery in effectively implementing the Fisheries Law, National Strategy on Fisheries Management and other fishery-related regulations,” the Governor said as he was delivering the opening speech at the event.

Rapid population growth and illegal fishing practices have led to over-fishing and falling fish yields. Due to the high dependency on fisheries for local livelihoods and food security, the Forestry Administration in collaboration with WWF, have been supporting the establishment of the Sen Kangha Community Fishery since 2007.

“With decreased fish yields observed over the past years due to illegal fishing activities, local communities are worried about potential disappearance of some fish species,” said Mr Moul Phath, WWF’s Provincial Conservation Planning Specialist.

The community fishery provides an opportunity for people in Koh Myeul Leu and Koh Myeul Krom villages to conserve fish resources for their long term benefit.

In his speech, the Governor also highlighted that many of Mondulkiri’s important zones of natural fish stocks, especially in Koh Nhek district, could, if managed sustainably, supply enough fish to meet the provincial consumption, as well as support other people living at the border of Ratanakiri province.

For more information, email to [email protected]

Source

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Srepok River Baseline Study

The NGO Forum of Cambodia

Download the Srepok River Baseline study here

Khmer Version is a couple down the list after the page jump.

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Fish abundance survey-the Srepok River

From WWF – factsheets & publications. 25 May 2009

The Srepok River is one of the major tributaries to the Mekong River in Cambodia.

This river is an important habitat and breeding ground for a variety of fish species, including those migrating from the Mekong River during the wet season. So far, there has been very limited or no assessment and documentation of fish species diversity and abundance in the Srepok River. An important issue is whether better understanding about the above knowledge can yield a better return for these limited resources. That is why WWF conducts survey that assesses fish species diversity and abundance, fish habitats, fishing methods, fish catch and consumption, and fisheries management in four selected villages along the Srepok River (Koh Myeul Leu, Koh Myeul Krom, Chi Met and Nong Bor villages).

Download the pdf from this page…

Visit WWF Greater Mekong Online

Visit WWF Online

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First turbine of Buon Kuop hydro-electric power plant put into operation

Nhan Dan – The first turbine of Buon Kuop hydro-electric power plant was put into official operation on May 12.

During the trial-run, the first turbine of Buon Kuop plant had generated 75 million kWh to the national grid.

The Buon Kuop hydro-electric power plant is constructed on the Srepok River, Dak Lak province, with a capacity of 280 MW and a total investment capital of VND 4,416 billion.

Visit Nhan Dan – The Central Organ of The Communist Party of Vietnam Online

[Ed apols for full quote]

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Srepok: unharmed by war, endangered by man

WWF — Years of isolation, the consequence of decades of war and civil strife, have left the Srepok River area and its rich biodiversity relatively intact. The river itself teems with exotic fish, while wild cattle and large cats still roam the surrounding plains. However, this natural wealth is highly threatened by destructive fishing practices, land conversion, illegal logging and the ferocious trade in wildlife.

Saving the Serengeti of Asia

Read article…

Looks like WWF are making big changes across the board online so things may not work as they seem for now. Some fantastic links to other WWF work with a generally overall improvement in navigation.

Visit WWF Online

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