They haven’t given up on the Myitsone Dam |
Wednesday, 18 April 2012
Written by William Boot
The Irrawaddy
Dam-building fever increasing
Corporations owned by governments are at the heart of a relentless push to build hydro-electric dam systems in Southeast Asia.
These corporations are driven by a combination of political pressure
for energy security and to justify their existence and growth.
The dams―in Burma, China’s Yunnan Province, Laos and
Cambodia―jeopardise farmland, fisheries, forests, natural irrigation and
rare wildlife and threaten to force many thousands of people from their
homes, say environmental protection groups.
Three of the biggest corporations involved are China’s Sinohydro
Corporation, the China Power Investment Corporation and the Electricity
Generating Authority of Thailand (EGAT).
Between them, they are building or have plans to build enough
electricity generating capacity from hydro dams to fuel the whole of
Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore on present power consumption
in those countries.
Blueprints for hydro dam construction projects in Laos alone, a
country of only six million people, would create an installed
electricity generating capacity of 40,000 megawatts―enough to keep the
lights, air conditioners and factories operating in Thailand and
Malaysia.
Such targets include controversial dams on the Irrawaddy and Salween
rivers in Burma, the Mekong where it runs through Laos, and some of the
region’s last animal and plant wilderness areas in Cambodia.
And despite stop orders at present on two major projects―the Myitsone
on the Irrawaddy and the Xayaburi on the Mekong―campaigners are not
hopeful they will be permanently halted. The American NGO International
Rivers thinks dams planned for the Irrawaddy, the Salween, the Mekong
and forested areas of Laos and Cambodia will “probably” go ahead finally
because public accountability in the region remains weak.
“These dams have been pushed in the name of development, for
prosperity and happiness of the people,” Pianporn Deetes, a spokeswoman
for International Rivers, told The Irrawaddy. “Any scientific and local
knowledge evidence [against the dams] would not mean anything for such
decisions,” she added.
The Chinese state-owned and controlled Sinohydro Corporation,
possibly the world’s biggest hydro-electric developer, claims the Three
Gorges system in China and the Bakun Dam in Malaysian Borneo among its
dubious credits.
The colossal Three Gorges can in theory generate 12 times Burma’s
present electricity producing capacity, but is beset with problems
ranging from water shortages to environmental degradation. The Bakun Dam
in Malaysia’s Sarawak State is a white elephant which has been under
construction for 15 years, has cost taxpayers over US$2 billion and is
still not fully operational. In the process it has despoiled an area of
tropical forest the size of Singapore.
Two large unfinished projects, one in Burma the other in Laos,
underline how determined these state corporations are to build their
dams regardless of the opposition.
In Burma, the victory celebrations by opponents of the 6,000-megawatt
Myitsone project on the Irrawaddy have been short lived. Only seven
months after President Thein Sein decreed that the unpopular dam was
suspended indefinitely, evidence is growing that its Chinese developers,
led by Sinohydro, are still active on the site.
In Laos, despite an unequivocal call by the Mekong Rivers Commission
(MRC) to halt all construction on the 1,300-megawatt Xayaburi project
pending a new environmental impact study, there is evidence of
continuing site work, claims International Rivers.
The main backer of the $3.7 billion Xayaburi dam is EGAT which will buy most of the electricity generated by the project.
Thailand is a member of the four-country MRC which agreed at a
ministerial-level meeting last December to stop work on the dam. The
Vietnamese and Cambodian governments are concerned that the dam will
reduce water flow and stop fish swimming upstream to spawning grounds.
The lower Mekong provides food for millions of people living alongside
its route from Laos to the Mekong Delta in southern Vietnam.
“Until recently, many of us hoped that the MRC would resolve regional
crises such as these,” says California-based International Rivers. “The
past year, however, has revealed glaring holes in the ability of the
MRC to make decisions. In the case of the Xayaburi Dam, for example,
Laos and Thailand have defied the regional process and proceeded with
preliminary construction.”
In Burma’s Kachin State, reports as recent as April 6 indicate that
preparations are in progress around the Myitsone site near the
confluence of the N’mai and Mali rivers where scores of Chinese workers
remain.
In Shan State near the border with Thailand, Chinese surveyors have
been reported working in the vicinity of an even bigger hydro-electric
dam, the 7,300-megawatt Tasang scheme on the Salween River. Sinohydro is
also the main contractor here, and one of the chief backers and likely
main recipient of any electricity generated is, once again, EGAT.
The Chinese have also dammed their own upper reaches of the Salween
and Mekong rivers, but why do the Thais not build dams in their own
backyard?
“Thai companies often feel there are too many obstacles within
Thailand and prefer the benefits of working in unregulated environments
where projects can be maximized without the need to comply with all of
the laws and regulations investors face inside Thailand,” Pianporn
explained.
“In Thailand, civil society can at least raise environmental concerns
to the companies and government for better standards and good
governance.”
A statement published by the Burma Rivers Network NGO on behalf of
dozens of community groups alleged last week that despite recent reforms
which have wooed senior Western politicians, major energy-related
development projects in Burma continue to trigger “human rights abuses
against local villagers, particularly ethnic communities.”
“These projects have been started without standards to prevent
harmful environmental and social impacts, and will therefore cause more
refugees,” the statement said. “Large-scale development projects should
not be implemented in areas of Burma where conflict remains unresolved,
as this will simply fuel further conflict.”
International Rivers says the next decade is critical for the future
of major regional rivers, notably the Mekong, but warns that “the
region’s governments and greedy foreign interests” seem intent on
constructing scores of dams along it which will have “devastating
impacts on downstream communities.”
(This first appeared in The Irrawaddy, with which Asia Sentinel has a content-sharing agreement.)
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