Showing posts with label Petition against Mekong River dams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Petition against Mekong River dams. Show all posts

Monday, June 22, 2009

World joins Mekong citizens in battle to stop dam building

Sun, Jun 21, 2009
Vietnam News/Asia News Network

VIETNAM - In a bold outpouring of public concern for Southeast Asia's Mekong River, people from the six-country Mekong region and around the world have urged governments to abandon plans for hydropower development along the river's mainstream.

In the face of strong government backing for dam building on the river, which feeds 60 million people, over 11,000 citizens in the region have signed the "Save the Mekong" petition addressed to the Prime Ministers of Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Viet Nam urging them to keep the river flowing freely and to pursue less damaging electricity options.

The petition was signed by fishers and farmers along the river's mainstream and tributaries, as well as by monks, students, city folk and even some of the region's celebrities. Another 5,000 people around the world signed postcards and an online petition with personal notes.

The petition written in seven languages was hand-delivered to Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Wednesday in Bangkok, and sent to other government leaders within the region.

"People are now more aware of the threat to the Mekong and the movement calling to protect the river and the life of the people living along the Mekong has spread out thanks to the signature collection," said Premrudee Daoroung of the Bangkok-based, non-profit Foundation for Ecological Recovery at a press conference for the petition launch.

With the postcards and signature collection, the regional governments are expected to make decisions to save the life and the environment of their own countries, said Mekong Programme Co-ordinator Carl Middleton.

The Mekong is host to the world's largest inland fishery and its second behind the Amazon River in diversity of aquatic animals. The river drains an area of 795,000sq.km. From the Tibetan Plateau it runs through China, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Viet Nam.

The building of dams is one of the most controversial issues to raised wide-spread concern among riverbank communities and the wider public over the severe consequences these dams will have.

Livelihoods

Since 2006, 11 big hydropower dams have been proposed for the river's mainstream in which seven dam sites are in Laos, two in Cambodia and two on the Thai-Lao border. This has been criticised on grounds of cost as well as damage to the environment and to the livelihoods of affected villagers.

Viet Nam is expected to suffer the most of the building it is at the lowest part of the river with 17 million Vietnamese people - almost one- third of the Mekong River citizens - living along the river.

"Broken ecosystem, soil erosion, bad impact of changed water flow on the transport system and dry fields are among the key concerns of Vietnamese farmers and citizens living along the river," Ngo Xuan Quang, of Aquatic Ecology and Biodiversity, said.

"An Giang and Dong Thap are the two Mekong Delta provinces having most severe soil erosion while Tien Giang is suffering most in dry fields," Quang said.

Poverty stricken Cambodia is one nation that is completely dependent on the river for food and the vast majority of its fledgling economy. The annual floods provide much needed water for crops for the otherwise dry dusty land, and to refresh the Tonle Sap, yet its major cities are all vulnerable to flooding.

Since the building of the first Chinese dam, many species have become endangered, including the Mekong dolphin and manatee; water levels have dropped and ferries get stuck, fish caught are small and the catch is less than half of that before the dam was built.

Mekong fisheries provide a critical source of food and income for millions of people along the river. Recent official estimates place the annual value of the river's wild capture fisheries at up to US$3 billion. Mainstream dams will block the massive fish migrations that accounts for up to 70 per cent of the river's commercial fish catch and that ensures regional food security. Experience around the world demonstrates there is no way to mitigate the fisheries impacts of such large dams.

China's dam construction on the upper Mekong mainstream (Lancang) has already caused serious environmental problems in the form of declining fish stocks, riverbank erosion and hazardous water level fluctuations in downstream Myanmar, northern Thailand and northern Laos.

Similarly severe cross-border impacts could create cross-border disputes.

Other environmental concerns arise from increased water flow in some parts as China clears rocks and sandbars, blasts gorges and slows water as it dams and floods other sections and causes the relocation of indig-enous peoples.

Cambodia, by far the most exposed, depending on a fine balance of water flow, fears scenarios of mass famine and devastating floods the likes of which destroyed the Angkor kingdom 700 years ago.

Vulnerable

Laos's biggest cities all hug the Mekong as does Viet Nam's largest city and financial hub, HCM City, which would be vulnerable mostly to low flow and pollution from these projects.

"Acting to protect the Mekong's natural wealth will ensure sustainable economic growth, protect food security and promote regional peace and prosperity," said Chhith Sam Ath, executive director of the NGO Forum on Cambodia, in his statement to PM Abhisit.

"In a world facing a growing food and water crisis, we are asking the region's leaders to work together to protect the Mekong River for the benefit of all the region's people and to pursue better ways to meet the region's electricity needs," Sam Ath said.

Friday, June 19, 2009

Thousands sign a Mekong River anti-dam petition

June 19, 2009
ABC Radio Australia

In an unprecedented move more than 15-thousand people from countries along the Mekong River system have signed a petition urging governments to abandon plans for hydropower along the river's mainstream.

There are 11 dams proposed along the lower Mekong, 7 in Laos, 2 at the Laos Thailand border and another 2 in Cambodia. The dilemma facing the region is that while the 11 dams will create hydropower energy that'll increase the countries economic potential, the dams could also destroy the fisheries and other aquatic wildlife, ruining the lives of the thousands of people who depend on the Mekong for their day to day existence and income.

Presenter: Claudette Werden
Speaker: Premrudee Daoroung, co founder Towards Ecological Recovery and Regional Alliance



DAOROUNG : We spent about 30 minutes to discuss the issues, the Prime Minister recognised the issues of the Mekong and also the dam and he said that the Thai government and he himself had been monitoring the situation but he didn't really have the opinion towards the hydropower dam yet but he has the opinion on the other projects, for example the water diversion from the Mekong to north-eastern Thailand which he believes there should be a better way to find water for south-eastern Thailand.

WERDEN: So were you happy with his response?

DAOROUNG: I do agree with the Prime Minister that the government needs to have more information, in general I think we're grateful the government and the Prime Minister spent more than 30 minutes with us to discuss the issues in a bit more detail but we think we should have more chance to monitor or follow up what we talked to him.

WERDEN: Now tell me how were you able to gather the 15-thousand signatures?

DAOROUNG: Yes it's been 3 months and we have printed postcards in three languages, Thai, Cambodian and English, so for us, even though the 16-thousand 380 signatures that we have got now might not look too big compared to the population of the Mekong but looking at the process it's a very big work and this was the very first time this news has reached the people, even the people along the Mekong and also the city people who never heard about this dam issue before.

WERDEN: So you're saying basically that a lot of people when you were approaching them to sign the petition had no idea the dams were being built?

DAOROUNG: Most of the people don't know about the 11 proposed dams but the impressive thing is that 95per cent of the people have listened to us, they were willing to sign, willing to support, so for us it's a good, good response and that as I mentioned before is a process because we all need to understand what's going on before we can support.

15,000 sign up to save the Mekong

Reports of planned hydro-electric dams surprised thousands of people along the Mekong River, say petition organisers. [Reuters]

Friday, June 19, 2009
Claudette Werden
ABC Radio Australia


In an unprecedented move, more than 15,000 people from countries beside the Mekong River have signed a petition urging governments to abandon plans for hydro-electricity along the river's mainstream.

Co-organiser Premrudee Daoroung told Radio Australia's Connect Asia program they printed postcards in three languages - Thai, Cambodian and English - and took three months to gather responses.

This week, Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva was presented with the petition.

Eleven dams are proposed along the lower Mekong - seven in Laos, two at the Laos-Thailand border and another two in Cambodia.

Risk to fishing

The dilemma facing the region is that while the 11 dams will create hydro-electricity which will increase the countries' economic potential, they could also destroy fish stocks and other aquatic life.

That could ruin the lives of the thousands of people who depend on the Mekong for their day-to-day existence and income.

Ms Daoroung, co-founder of the Bangkok-based Towards Ecological Recovery and Regional Alliance (TERRA), says the Prime Minister told them while the Thai government was monitoring the situation, he felt he needed more information before forming a view about a hydro-power dam.

But Mr Vejjajiva did feel there should be a better way to find water for agriculture in north-eastern Thailand than huge projects on the river to channnel water off - as proposed by a previous administration - she said.

Ms Daoroung said environmental groups were pleased they had 30 minutes with the Prime Minister and she understood his wish for more details.

'Big work'

As for the petition, she says that "even though the 16,380 signatures that we have got now might not look too big compared to the population of the Mekong . . . looking at the process, it's a very big work.

Ms Daoroung says most people approached had not known about the 11 proposed dams.

"This was the very first time this news has reached the people - the people along the Mekong, and also the city people who never heard about this dam issue before.

"But the impressive thing is that 95 percent of the people have listened to us, they were willing to sign, willing to support.

"So for us it's a good, good response . . . because we all need to understand what's going on before we can support" such a cause.