River be damned
The Age | 14 June 2013
The mighty Mekong, the lifeblood
 of many Asian nations, and holiday destination for an increasing number
 of Australians, is being heavily dammed. Can the river, and the people 
who depend on it, survive?
''Laos has simply ignored the requests repeatedly made by Cambodia and Vietnam to study the trans-boundary impacts of the dam,'' says Ame Trandem, south-east Asia program director at International Rivers.''The Mekong is becoming the testing grounds for new technologies, which may prove to have disastrous effects. The entire future of the river's ecosystem is at stake. The Xayaburi Dam is just the tip of the iceberg.''
As the narrow longtail boat glides downstream from the dusty 
hamlet of Nong Kiew towards the golden temples  of Luang Prabang,   
mirror images of jungle, vertical limestone cliffs and impossibly steep 
mountains shimmer in the waters of the Nam Ou River, a tributary of the 
mighty Mekong.
Endangered Asian elephants and Indochinese tigers still roam 
the upper reaches of the river within Phou Den Din National Protected 
Area, one of 20  national parks in Laos. This is the beauty that 
tourists, many Australians among them, come so far to see.
Yet this undeveloped region in northern Laos is about to be 
jolted into the industrial age. Three hours downriver from Nong Kiew, a 
scar of ochre-coloured dirt and rock stretches for kilometres: 
construction of the Nam Ou 2 Dam is steamrolling ahead.
''We started early this year and we'll be finished in three years,'' boasts a Chinese engineer dwarfed by a colossal concrete dam wall. Conversation is brought to an abrupt halt when his superior arrives. ''You have to leave,'' he says. ''We don't want pictures of this posted on Weibo [the Chinese version of Twitter].''
The 450 kilometre-long Nam Ou, one of the few Lao rivers 
traversable by boat for its entire length, will soon be severed seven 
times over by a 350-kilometre stretch of hydropower dams built and 
maintained by Chinese giant Sinohydro.
The Nam Ou 2 belongs to the first phase of the $1.95 billion 
project, which is expected to be operational by 2018. Details 
surrounding the project are scant. Even the final destination for the 
proposed 1146 megawatts of hydropower is unclear, although the Lao 
government claims the first three dams, Nam Ou 2, 5 and 6, will provide 
electricity for domestic consumption.
Details of the other dams have not been made public. 
Ultimately, the Phou Den Din National Protected Area will be partially 
inundated by the two northernmost dams, the Nam Ou 6 and 7, in violation
 of Sinohydro's own environmental policy against development inside 
national parks. A pristine waterway and one of the last intact 
ecosystems in the region will change forever.
Despite  concerns  of environmentalists and objections  by 
neighbouring Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam, the tiny, landlocked nation
 of Laos is following China's lead in its exploitation of the Mekong 
River and its tributaries.
China already has five hydropower dams operating and three 
more are planned for the upper reaches of the Mekong, the river that 
begins in the Tibetan Plateau and continues through China and five 
south-east Asian nations on its way to the South China Sea. Questions 
remain as to whether the river and those who depend on it for their 
livelihoods can survive.
''The government tells us that this will develop Laos,'' says
 65-year-old fisherman Thongsai Chanthalangsy, speaking at his village  
half an hour downstream from the Nam Ou 2 construction site. ''It's not 
for the people,'' he continues, ''the power will mostly be sold 
overseas. We can't talk to the government. We have to follow what they 
say.''
Chanthalangsy has been advised that his home, which falls 
within the catchment of the planned Nam Ou 1 dam, will not be submerged,
 yet many other homes in his village will be.
''They will build more dams and the problems will get worse. 
When it's finished there might not be enough water for our gardens and 
not enough fish to catch. There won't be compensation. We'll have to 
move.''
The Mekong and its tributaries are the front line of a 
massive development drive by Laos' communist, one-party leadership to 
lift the nation from the ranks of Asia's poorest countries.
Although hydroelectric power will bring much-needed revenue 
to the impoverished country, many fear that dams will cost dearly Laos, 
and all those  for whom the Mekong is a lifeblood. In Laos, Thailand, 
Cambodia and Vietnam, more than 60 million people depend on the Mekong 
for food, income and transportation.
Steep, winding, unmade roads carry a constant procession of 
trucks, earth movers, workers and occasionally armed soldiers to the 
expansive site. The $3.4 billion price tag of 810-metre-long and 
32-metre-high Laos-Thai mega dam  is being footed by a conglomerate of 
six Thai banks.
On its completion in 2019, around 95 per cent of the 
hydropower dam's 1260 megawatts will be exported to Thailand. This is 
almost a third of the power generated by the 16 major dams of 
Australia's Snowy Mountains Scheme, built over a period of 25 years to 
generate around 3700 megawatts.
Along with the immediate environmental impact of a project of
 such magnitude, hundreds of villagers have been resettled to make way 
for the dam.
At the new village, Natornatoryai, close to the construction 
site, teacher Khao Thevongsa, 28, is dissatisfied with the location, 
with its steep hills of barely arable land and the constant stream of 
traffic to the site.
She hopes that the dam may become a tourist attraction in its
 own right. ''We have to start from zero,'' she says, ''but when the dam
 is finished maybe tourists will come here to see it and we can earn 
more money.'' Almost every answer to a question begins with, ''We don't 
have a choice.''
About 300  were first shifted to Natornatoryai, which is 
about 35 kilometres from the river. ''The old people didn't want to move
 here,'' says 63-year-old Khamkeo Daovong as her daughter-in-law and 
child play on her concrete floor. ''I was born near the river and so 
were my parents. Many people cried when they saw their new homes.''
Daovong complains that her house was unfinished when she 
moved in. The mismatched cinder-block and terracotta bricks were paid 
for out of her own pocket to keep out the dust and wind. Compensation in
 the form of rice and  about $16.40 in cash per month dried up after one
 year instead of the promised three.
''I was given pigs and ducks to raise, but it's very 
difficult to make money. I used to pan for gold, but now I just do 
nothing.''
According to non-government organisation International 
Rivers,  about 25 families have already left the village  to return to 
the river to fish, tend their river bank gardens and pan for gold.
For those who live in Laos, open opposition to the dam is 
unthinkable. The Lao regime has a history of ruthlessly silencing 
dissent.
On December 15 last year, Sombath Somphone, 62, a prominent 
campaigner for the environment and the rural poor, and a champion for 
sustainable development, was abducted from a police roadblock by two 
unidentified men in the nation's capital, Vientiane.
Somphone, the 2005 recipient of the Ramon Magsaysay prize,  
often referred to as Asia's Nobel prize, has not been seen or heard from
 since. The Laos government denies any involvement. The official 
explanation for his disappearance was a ''business dispute'', although 
the activist has no business interests.
The incident brought rare international attention to Laos, as
 then US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and  her successor, John 
Kerry, led calls for a thorough and transparent investigation into 
Somphone's whereabouts and wellbeing.
International calls to the Laos government for action and 
information on Somphone remain unheeded. In a recent statement by New 
York-based watchdog Human Rights Watch, Asia director Brad Adams accused
 the Lao government of direct involvement in the activist's 
disappearance.
''Lao authorities have not answered the simplest questions, 
such as why, if Sombath was kidnapped, did the police at the scene do 
nothing to protect him,'' Adams said.  ''The absence of any real 
investigation points to the government's responsibility.''
The reasons for the activist's disappearance are unclear. But
  Somphone's abduction has worsened an already fearful climate in Laos' 
environmental grassroots organisations.
Land rights and enforced disappearances aside, dams on the 
Mekong have serous ramifications far beyond the borders of Laos. The 
Xayaburi Dam is the first of 11 dams planned for the Lower Mekong River,
 nine of which are in Laos. Environmentalists have already blamed  
China's five Mekong dams, as well as drought, for some of the lowest 
water levels seen on the river in 50 years. China denies it is 
responsible.
On top of providing crucial sediment for arable land 
downstream, the Mekong sustains the world's largest inland fishery,  
with 877 species. According to conservation group Great Rivers 
Partnership, this supplies an industry worth between $3.84 billion  and 
$6.89 billion.
Fish are a foundation of regional food security. In Cambodia,
 80 per cent of the nation's animal protein is provided by freshwater 
fisheries. Alarmingly, a study  of the proposed 11 Lower Mekong 
hydropower dams by the International Centre of Environmental Management 
concluded that the dams would reduce fish numbers by 26 per cent to 42 
per cent.
Regional famine is a worst-case scenario. Claims by the Lao 
government and Xayaburi dam officials that fish ladders will allow safe 
passage for migratory Mekong fish species have been met with great 
scepticism.
Organised dissent to the Xayaburi Dam has mainly come from 
Thailand. A flotilla of Thai fishermen and villagers who worked the 
Mekong travelled to Vientiane to protest during the Asia-Europe Meeting.
In April, delegates from eight Thai provinces on the Mekong 
were joined by protesters from Cambodia as they occupied the entrance to
 the headquarters of the dam's construction company, Cr Karnchang, one 
of the dam's financiers.
Although  limited at present, opposition to dams on the 
Mekong may be  about to rise rapidly as more dams are built and their 
impact becomes apparent.  Beyond street and river protests, there are 
rumblings at the highest levels of government that threaten to  become a
 diplomatic stoush.
Should the worst fears of environmentalists materialise, 
countries downstream from the dams stand to bear the brunt of any damage
 to the Mekong's ecosystem. Although Vietnam and Cambodia have plans for
 their own hydropower projects, they have already objected to the 
Xayaburi Dam through the Mekong River Commission,  of which Thailand and
 Laos are also members.
Both countries have argued that work on the Xayaburi Dam 
breaks an agreement forged in December 2010 that no dams would be built 
until studies on negative trans-boundary environmental impacts  were 
completed.
Vietnam has called for a 10-year moratorium on all Mekong 
dams. Such concerns have been brushed aside by Lao Deputy Minister for 
Energy and Mines, Viraphonh Viravonghas, who claimed the extensive 
construction is merely ''preparatory work''.
''Laos has simply ignored the requests repeatedly made by 
Cambodia and Vietnam to study the trans-boundary impacts of the dam,'' 
says Ame Trandem, south-east Asia program director at International 
Rivers.
''The Mekong is becoming the testing grounds for new 
technologies, which may prove to have disastrous effects. The entire 
future of the river's ecosystem is at stake. The Xayaburi Dam is just 
the tip of the iceberg.''
Dave Tacon is an Australian  journalist based in Shanghai.
2 comments:
Let's fucken invade Laos and annex it back to Khmer glorious old empire. Khmers will suffer the most with Dam Laos.
Are crazy or just jocking. Lol. Cambodia is still in a grip of Youn. Laos is the only Cambodia neighbor who not thinking of annexing our little country. Cambodia can barely defended against a limited Siam assaults along the border areas let along invading Laos.
Laos chosen to build dams that will effect millions of Laotian and Khmer down stream. We Khmer can't do much to influence Laotian to stop. The Mekong flowed through Laos before it flows into our country.
The only way that have any effect is to negotiate with Laotian to let more water flow downstream so the river level in Cambodia are not too low. We can also making sure that our country is safe if there is a breakage in this dam.
Cambodia must be strong enough for anyone to listen. Laos is the lesser of three evil neighbors. WE MUST NEGOTIATE WITH THEM, NOT WAR. War will only brought suffering to peoples on both sides of the border.
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