Thursday, September 10, 2009

A river becoming a road to ruin

September 10, 2009
EDITORIAL
The Nation


Dams and rock-blasting projects are destroying biodiversity and traditional cultures of the Mekong

The groans and grumbles emanating from Thai villages along the banks of the Mekong right now suggest that the river is in serious trouble. Villagers are complaining that Chinese dams upstream are causing unseasonably high and low levels that are disrupting river life.

One calamity that befell riverside villages in Chiang Rai was a swift surge of two metres in August last year. The residents, as well as environmental groups, blamed this on the opening of gates at several dams in China's Yunnan province, including at the huge barrier in Jinhong, the capital of Xishuangbanna administrative region. In just five minutes, the river level jumped half a metre.

Seen as a harbinger of a bleak future for both farmers and fishermen, this single event inundated farmland and villages in three of Chiang Rai's districts along the river's bank and its tributaries, creating widespread panic and mass evacuations. Such a swift surge hadn't happened in 40 years and the villagers were caught unprepared.

Meanwhile, fishermen are seeing their catches dwindle day by day. As hydropower dams upstream block the river's flow, fish find it hard to adjust to the river's changing ecology. Researchers reckon their seasonal migrations are being disturbed and disrupted by the dam projects.

Almost immediately, locals pointed the finger of blame at the dams in China. But the Thai government is not out of the loop of responsibility. With ample warning from experts and environmentalists, Bangkok can't really say it didn't see this coming. The question is what the government will now do about it.

Last May, the United Nations released a report stating that China's dam-building ambitions pose the greatest threat to the future of the already beleaguered Mekong, one of the world's major rivers and a key source of water, transport and food for the region.

Although the Mekong is widely regarded as a Southeast Asian river, its source is in the Himalayan glaciers high in Tibet. Nearly half of the 4,880-kilometre river flows through China's Yunnan province before it reaches the Southeast Asian nations of Burma, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam, where it empties into the South China Sea.

China is constructing a series of eight dams on the upper half of the Mekong, where the river passes through the high gorges of Yunnan. These include the recently completed Xiowan Dam which, at 292 metres high, is the world's tallest. Its storage capacity is equal to all of Southeast Asia's reservoirs combined, the UN report said. The dams are needed to meet China's rapacious energy demands.

Laos, meanwhile, has started construction on 23 dams on the Mekong and its tributaries, expected to be finished by 2010, the UN said. They will act as a means to spur development and lift the country from poverty. Cambodia and Vietnam also have ambitious dam-building plans.

The report also mentioned that the effects of the proposed dam developments include "changes in river flow volume and timing, water quality deterioration and loss of biodiversity".

In addition to the dam-building spree are more river-blasting schemes. The Chinese are going to blow up islets, boulders and other natural barriers in several locations to make the river accessible to 500-tonne cargo craft. The belief is that shipping cargo to trading posts downstream at Chiang Saen and Chiang Khong in Thailand will be more cost-efficient than using air and land routes. And the Chinese are determined to achieve that goal no matter what.

The Thai locals are unsympathetic, pointing to the damage to the river's ecology.

One research project shows that the river junction in the Golden Triangle used to boast 65 types of flora that formed the food source and habitat of river creatures. Locals say that Mekong giant catfish lay their eggs around the islets and boulders that have been earmarked for blasting. Another study found that the lower stretches of the Mekong were capable of yielding fish catches of 11.3 million tonnes per year, and the middle stretches 0.9-1.2 million tonnes, worth an overall Bt105 billion to the local economy.

There have already been attempts to blow up islets in the Chiang Rai Mekong. Somkiat Khuenchiangsa, coordinator for the Natural Resources and Mekong Lanna Culture Conservation Network, says that China targeted Pha Dai in Chiang Rai, a scenic spot popular with tourists. Following villagers' protests, the river there was spared.

That stretch is a habitat for several species of fish. But Chinese engineers consider the islets obstacles to their mega projects.

Somkiat says that Thailand and China shook hands on an agreement to remove the Mekong islets in that area, but local villagers were never consulted.

For now, the Mekong's ordinary folk are finding it hard to make their voices heard, and their way of life is, it seems, steadily being destroyed. Fishermen are leaving their villages to labour in fruit orchards and farms. But the silent cry from the riverbank remains: Stop hurting the Mekong, its plants, creatures and people.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

that's right! and they are only picking on cambodia! bad karma for siem country! god bless cambodia.