Tuesday, April 17th, 2012
Radio Free Asia
Radio Free Asia
In a controversial move, a Thai company has signed a
nearly $2 billion-dollar contract for the construction of a dam on the
Mekong River in Laos even though governments in the region have not
cleared the project.
Ch. Karnchang informed the Thai stock exchange Tuesday it had signed a 52 billion baht (US $1.7 billion) contract with Xayaburi Power, a Lao-Thai joint venture, to build the project, Thai media reported.
The Xayaburi hydropower dam would be on the lower part of the Mekong
River, and environmental groups say it would affect the lives of
millions in the region.
The latest contract says construction on the dam will begin on March 15 next year and be completed in eight years.
In December, Laos had shelved plans for the dam pending further
environmental assessments, following a meeting by the Mekong River
Commission (MRC), a regional body of Southeast Asian countries that
share the river.
Leaders from Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam agreed further
study was needed on the sustainable management and development of the
river before the Xayaburi project could continue.
Despite the delay, Lao energy officials have remained committed to
the project, which costs a total of US $3.8 billion, Bounthuang
Phengthavongsa, director-general of the Energy and Mining Ministry said
in January.
“We want to build this dam and we will try hard to do so. Our
intention and our hope is that in the end we will be able to build it
despite all opposition,” he told RFA.
Laos has planned 70 hydropower projects on its rivers and officials have said it hopes to become “the battery of Asia.”
It is not immediately known whether the Lao government had been officially informed by the companies that signed the contract.
Preliminary construction on the project, including work access roads
and a work camp, has picked up in recent months, according International
Rivers, a US-based environmental NGO.
“Laos has not clarified if construction on the Xayaburi Dam will stop
while the study takes place. Legally, Laos may not proceed with
construction until all four governments have agreed. Practically,
allowing construction would undermine the study,” the group said.
A large number of workers have been employed for a two-year period to
construct access roads and facilities for the project, it said.
High stakes
Critics of the Xayaburi dam, which would provide 95 percent of its
electricity to Thailand, say that damming the Mekong threatens to
destroy the ecology of the river, disrupt the livelihood of riparian
communities, and jeopardize the food security throughout the region.
“The government should take care of the environment too, at the same
time as developing the economy,” a resident in the Lao capital Vientiane
said.
Mekong dams have faced stiff opposition from environment activists,
who say the fate of the Xayaburi project will affect future decisions on
the 11 other dams planned on the mainstream part of the Lower Mekong.
“The ecosystem is already changing, and now the dam will be built on
Mekong River. The Xayaburi dam will be the first; of course it will
affect the ecosystem the most,” a Thai resident who lives near the
Mekong said.
“If the Xayaburi dam can be built, so will 12 others. I think that is a big concern,” he said.
The Stimson Center, a US-based think tank, applauded Laos’s
postponement of the Xayaburi project last year, saying it was the first
time a Mekong country had made a decision about a mainstream dam based
on the impact beyond its borders.
The Xayaburi project is the Mekong River Commission’s “biggest test”
since its establishment in 1995, the think tank said in a report in
March, and warned that dams on the river could have a harmful impact on
the entire region.
“The negative impacts on food security, livelihoods, water
availability, and water quality have the potential to jeopardize the
region’s hard-won peace and stability,” it said.
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