Archive for the 'rivers' Category

Despite plentiful water, states draft river rules

"Because UConn runs entirely off of wells, UConn's water consumption has already contributed to drying up a stretch of the Fenton River during the dry season." Photo Retrieved from: ecohusky.uconn.edu

“Water is plentiful in New England, but that’s not stopping several states from drafting regulations to ensure it’s available despite droughts, heat spells and development pressures.

“Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island rules will regulate so-called stream flows governing how water utilities and businesses can tap into waterways — while trying to allay environmentalists’ concerns over fish habitats and recreation. Maine has had regulations in force for three years.

“”Our state has enough water falling on it that, on paper, there should be enough water for all the users,” said Connecticut Rep. Mary Mushinsky, who backed legislation calling for regulations. “Our system should be sustainable but we’ve never resolved conflicts between users in such a way that it’s predictable or manageable.”

“A long-running problem was resolved just this summer, more than 20 years after Waterbury began diverting water from the Shepaug River for municipal use without releasing surplus water from its reservoir, as demanded by environmentalists.”

Read more: Boston Herald

Temen Más Muertes Por Las Lluvias En Guatemala

Foto encontrado en: www.laverdad.com

“El presidente de Guatemala, Álvaro Colom, dijo que se teme que el número de muertos aumente en su país.

Alejandro Maldonado, secretario de la Coordinadora Nacional para la Reducción de Desastres (Conred), dijo que el 12% del territorio es susceptible a deslaves.

Mientras tanto, Colom informó que se reiteró el estado de calamidad a nivel nacional.

“No llovía tanto en el país desde 1949″, dijo Eddy Sánchez, encargado del Instituto Nacional de Sismología, Vulcanología, Meteorología e Hidrología (Insivumeh).

Las lluvias provocaron el desborde de ríos en el noreste y sudoeste, además de hundimientos y deslaves en las carreteras.

clicVea fotos de los efectos de las lluvias

Guatemala se encuentra en “estado de calamidad” desde que la tormenta Agatha, en combinación con la erupción del Volcán Pacaya (centro-occidente), afectó al país a fines de mayo pasado con daños a la infraestructura vial, incluyendo 13 puentes.

La tragedia climática se combina con la falta de recursos que enfrenta el gobierno, en parte por los vestigios de la crisis económica global y la caída de la recaudación tributaria, y en parte porque el Congreso no ha autorizado el uso de un préstamo para atender los efectos de los desastres naturales.”

Leér más: BBC Mundo

Unsolved Coal Ash Problem

Photo retrieved from: www.delawareonline.com

“Last Monday, the E.P.A. held the first in a series of regional hearings on two quite different proposals governing how coal-fired power plants dispose of waste.

One proposal, favored by public-interest groups and by agency scientists, would replace a patchwork of uneven — and in many cases weak — state regulations with new national standards. It would formally designate coal ash as a hazardous waste under federal law, require industry to phase out porous sludge ponds, replace them with sturdy, leak-proof facilities, and take other protective steps.

The competing proposal would establish federal guidelines for disposal but leave enforcement to the states. It would also preserve coal ash’s status as a nonhazardous substance. Though the proposal barely improves on the status quo, the Office of Management and Budget — after heavy lobbying by the coal industry — agreed to give it equal billing in the public hearings.

The tougher proposal is obviously better. Coal ash, the byproduct of coal combustion, is a huge problem. Its toxins — which can include arsenic, lead and other heavy metals — can poison local water supplies. America’s power plants produce 130 million tons of the stuff every year, enough to fill a train of boxcars stretching from the District of Columbia to Australia.”

Read more: New York Times

Can China Save the Beleaguered Yangtze River?

Photo retrieved from: AlterNet.org

“Overfishing, pollution, and habitat fragmentation from dams — including the massive Three Gorges Dam — have brought the Yangtze to its current state. With more dams planned and Chinese officials intoxicated with unbridled economic growth, the future looks just as grim for the Yangtze’s vanishing species. Much of the river basin “will soon be a mere semblance of its natural state, offering few prospects for persistence of what remains of the river’s unique biodiversity,” says David Dudgeon, an aquatic ecologist at the University of Hong Kong.

“All is not yet lost, however. Seasonal fishing bans have given some species a breather. “We can save the remaining ecology of the Yangtze,” argues Xie Songguang, an ecologist at the Institute of Hydrobiology in Wuhan. The potential savior that he and others are counting on is a 10-year fishing moratorium. Such a ban may seem drastic, but it would have a tiny effect on fish markets, as the Yangtze supplies less than 1 percent of China’s freshwater fish production, including aquaculture. A ban is feasible — if the political willpower can be summoned to implement it. With the Yangtze’s ecological health in obvious decline and the economic toll of a ban manageable, the prospects for a moratorium are looking better and better, experts say.”

read more: AlterNet

Nuclear Plant’s Use Of River Water Prompts $1.1 Billion Debate With State

Photo retrieved from: www.nytimes.com A canal carrying water used at the Indian Point nuclear power plant and soon to be reintroduced into the Hudson River. The use of river water and the effect on wildlife has caused disagreement.

“BUCHANAN, N.Y. — Just beneath the wind-stippled surface of the Hudson River here, huge pipes suck enough water into the Indian Point nuclear plant every second to fill three Olympic swimming pools. And each second they take in dozens of organisms — fish and crabs, but mostly larvae — that are at the center of a $1.1 billion debate: should the plant have to put in cooling towers that would vastly reduce the intake of water?

Yes, says New York State, which puts the annual death toll at nearly a billion organisms and is withholding a water permit that the plant would need to extend its initial 40-year operating license.

No, says Entergy, the plant owner, which argues that more fish could be saved by installing a different water-intake system. It warns that, if built, the cooling towers would pump tons of pollution into the air of New York’s northern suburbs — and that Westchester County already fails to meet national air quality standards for particulates.”

Read more: The New York Times

Le Urge A La Riviera Megaproyecto De Agua

Foto encontrado en: www.artisanstable.com

“Los detalles del proyecto para un megaacueducto lo presentó de viva voz el presidente Héctor Paniagua, con el cual podrá dotarse de agua tanto a la zona hotelera en crecimiento, como a todos los pueblos integrados en la parte norte de la Riviera Nayarit integrados en el municipio de Bahía de Banderas.

“El problema del agua no la vamos a resolver con un pozo aquí o con otro pozo allá. Se debe prevenir el crecimiento hotelero y urbano de toda la costa norte y esto sólo podrá lograrse con un mega acueducto”, señaló Héctor Paniagua ante importantes funcionarios federales y del estado.

El Presidente hizo una referencia definitiva: enormes acueductos se construyeron en siglos pasados, incluso nuestras razas indígenas los hicieron, entonces, ¿por qué no se puedan hacer ahora con tantos elementos técnicos a favor?

El argumento de Paniagua fue contundente, Eugenio Amador Quijano, del Fonain, y Felipe Prado Hopfner, secretario de Planeación, estuvieron de acuerdo para que el Gobierno municipal, por conducto del ingeniero Merced Venegas, director del Oromapas, presente el estudio para que con dinero del Fondo Nacional de Infraestructura participe en este ambicioso proyecto que garantizará agua a toda una enorme zona en crecimiento turístico y crecimiento urbano que es la costa de Bahía de Banderas.

Sobre este tema, el presidente Paniagua abundó lo siguiente: El Río Ameca cuenta con abundante corriente que es aprovechada en pequeña escala. Debemos aquí crear proyectos para el crecimiento en una zona de enorme futuro turístico, pero sobre todo para resolver la falta de agua de los pueblos desde Corral del Risco hasta Lo de Marcos.”

Leer mas: El Occidental

Pakistan Flooding Because of Farms?

Photo: People wading through flood waters

Photo retrieved from: National Geographic

“The major river engineering is basically a Faustian bargain,” says Daanish Mustafa of King’s College London, recalling the fable in which a man sells his soul to the devil in exchange for a life of luxury. Mustafa is a geographer who has studied the history of Pakistan’s river management.

“Until a few decades ago, there were typically mild floods each summer–the time when the monsoon rainfall hits, and the melt from the snowpack in the Himalaya and Karakoram Mountains is at its peak.

“But now, because humans have sculpted the river and the surrounding natural floodplain and wetlands for farming and other needs, there are fewer floods, but when they hit, they are far worse, said Mustafa.

“There’s not very much space [in the river channel] to absorb all the rainfall,” says Asad Sarwar Qureshi, a water resources expert at the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) branch in Lahore, Pakistan. “We need to get it back into shape, so that it can carry its original capacity.”

“Wetlands along the river’s course used to take up some floodwaters, and the government also used to divert excess water into “no man’s land” during the monsoon season, he says. But those areas have been converted to farmland, he says . . .

“Allowing the river to flood more regularly, and naturally, could help temper the floods and make them more tolerable, say Mustafa and other experts . . .

“Managing Pakistan’s floods is a delicate balance between giving the river more room, and building barriers to protect people and their land.”

read more: National Geographic

New Online Map Plots 140 Large Dams Planned for the Amazon

Photo retrieved from: dams-info.org

“An interactive online database and map launched today graphically illustrates the impacts from more than 140 large dams at various stages of planning in the Amazon Basin. This unique resource, available at www.dams-info.org, uses official sources of information to document the shocking number of dams planned in the Amazon Basin in Brazil, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru, and outlines the devastation these projects would bring to the river and its peoples.

“The Amazon plays a key role in regulating the world’s climate and is an area of extraordinary biodiversity. The largest and arguably the most important river basin in the world, the Amazon contains 60% of the world’s remaining tropical rainforest. However, the more than 140 dam projects described in the database threaten irrevocable damage to the Amazon’s biological integrity and to local populations whose livelihoods depend upon healthy riverine ecosystems.

“Available in English, Spanish and Portuguese, the “Dams in Amazonia” database presents technical and economic data about existing, planned and partly built dams. In the Brazilian Amazon alone, more than 60 dams are planned; neighboring countries such as Peru, Bolivia and Colombia also have plans for massive projects.

“It’s astounding to see the plans that governments and the dam industry have for the world’s most important river basin. If all these projects are built, it would be catastrophic for the Amazon ecosystem and the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of indigenous people and riverbank dwellers who depend on the river for survival,” said Brent Millikan, Amazon Program Director for International Rivers.”

read more: International Rivers

Rogue River jumps the gun on dam; Relentless river overwhelms sand spit and flows freely past Gold Ray Dam for first time in 106 years

“The Rogue River on Wednesday unexpectedly flowed freely past Gold Ray Dam for the first time in 106 years when a sand spit collapsed during demolition efforts there, draining the upstream impoundment.

“Construction crews early Wednesday built a temporary dam to a sand spit that isolated Tolo Slough from the rest of the upstream backwaters and drained the slough as part of a project to remove Gold Ray Dam.

“As the slough drained, the spit’s soft sand gave way around 11:15 a.m., sending the entire river through the dam’s freshly cut-out southern end in a torrent of turbid water — almost two weeks earlier than planned.

“And just like that, the Rogue flowed freely through 157 miles of river stretch for the first time since the Ray brothers tamed the Rogue for power generation near Gold Hill in 1904.

“”It’s the way we planned it, but just not this soon,” said Scott Wright, whose River Design Group spearheaded the demolition plans for the $5.6 million project.

“This is what would have gone down in a week and a half,” Wright said. “Mother Nature has its own schedule.”

“As water chugged downstream, it exposed the banks of the main impoundment and the adjacent Kelly Slough for the first time in more than a century, revealing long-lost artifacts resting in the smelly organic ooze of the slough bottom.”

Read more: Mail Tribune

Lake Mead’s Water Level Plunges as 11-Year Drought Lingers

Photo Retrieved from: destination360.com

“Lake Mead, the enormous reservoir of Colorado River water that hydrates Arizona, Nevada, California and northern Mexico, is receding to a level not seen since it was first being filled in the 1930s, stoking existential fears about water supply in the parched Southwest.

“Heightening those concerns are recent signs that the region’s record-breaking, 11-year drought could wear on for another year or longer. July not only saw the lake drop to 1956 levels but also brought cooling temperatures in the Pacific Ocean that signaled a developing La Niña system, historically a harbinger of more hot and dry weather.

“The La Niña “appears to be strong, and it might even last two years,” said Brad Udall, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Western Water Assessment program at the University of Colorado.”

Read more: The New York Times

Biggest relocation in China since Three Gorges

“China’s growing thirst for water is driving one of the world’s biggest mass relocations, with 440,000 people leaving their homes to make way for a huge man-made canal project to channel water to drought-prone Beijing.

“An advance party of 499 villagers were moved yesterday from their homes near Wuhan in Hubei province, China’s heartland, in preparation for one of the biggest irrigation schemes in history.

“By the end of September, 60,000 people will have left the area. The remainder will be relocated by 2014, giving up their homes to make way for the South-North Water Diversion Project (SNWD) which will divert water from China’s largest river, the Yangtze.”

Read more: The Independent

In Pakistan, Water Everywhere–and Not a Drop to Drink

Photo Retrieved from: blogs.state.gov

“”I was offered a glass of the brown river water yesterday,” says Lisa Beyl, a Catholic Relief Services program manager in flood-stricken northern Pakistan. “It literally looks like mud. It is the dirtiest water I have ever seen in my life. I can’t believe that people are drinking it, but they are, out of necessity.”

“As rains continue to pour down on the flooded country, hundreds of thousands of Pakistanis have been left homeless. Worse, they have no access to drinkable water.

“”We have to drink water from the river but it is so dirty. But we have no other options because the floodwaters damaged our water source and washed away our pipes,” says a man in the northern town of Besham whose home and land were swept away. “My family is getting sick. Today, I took my 15-month-old son to the hospital because he has diarrhea and a high fever. If the water problem is not solved, I do not know what I will do.”"

Read more: The Huffington Post

The Kalamazoo River ‘Mess’ is a Lot More Than That

Retrieved from: swobadaimages.com

If the BP blowout in the Gulf of Mexico is causing us to reconsider deep-sea drilling, then last week’s oil disaster in Michigan should give us pause about constructing new oil pipelines. And taken together, the spills spotlight what’s wrong with our nation’s energy direction.

Patrick D. Daniel, chief executive of Enbridge Inc., apologized last week for “the mess we made.” He was referring to the pipeline rupture that dumped about a million gallons of crude oil into Michigan’s Kalamazoo River. Though we’re sure that Daniel genuinely regrets that it was his company’s turn to advertise the obvious dangers of continuing our nation’s dependence on oil, this time, sorry’s not good enough.

The immediate consequences of this particular “mess” are bad enough. Thirty miles of the Kalamazoo River were fouled. Birds, fish and other wildlife were killed or oiled. People had to be evacuated from their homes because of high levels of benzene in the air. When the heavy crude passed through the city of Battle Creek, the Kellogg Co. even had to stop making Corn Flakes.

The Kalamazoo empties directly into Lake Michigan. If oil had reached that lake, it would have been, in the words of Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm, “a tragedy of historic proportions.” Although the Kalamazoo has come a long way from the days when it was the site for paper mills that dumped chemical waste directly into the river, a stretch of the river is still a Superfund site, and scientists warn that the spilled oil could release pollutants buried in the river’s sediment, unleashing even more toxins.

Read More: LA Times

Environmentalists say pollution makes baptism at sacred spot in Jordan River unsafe

“Environmentalists claim that the hallowed spot along the Jordan River where Christians believe John the Baptist baptized Jesus Christ has become too filthy for human use.

“”Untreated sewage continues to flow both directly and indirectly into the river,” said Gidon Bromberg of Friends of the Earth Middle East, a group calling for baptism to be banned at a site where thousands of Christian pilgrims immerse themselves each year in the green-brown water.

“Israeli authorities vigorously dispute the claims of unhealthful levels of pollution at the sacred bend in the Jordan. They rushed this week to reassure pilgrims about the site, which is a major draw for the more than 2 million Christians who visit Israel each year.”

Read more:  The Guardian

Enbridge Inc. Continues Cleanup of Kalamazoo River

Photo Retrieved from: mlive.com

“Since the 6B pipeline on the Lakehead System burst on July 26, Enbridge Inc.shut down the pipeline and closed the isolation valves, stopping the source of the oil but estimates some 19,500 barrels of crude may have been released from the site, which is near the company’s Marshall, Mich., pump station, to Talmadge Creek.

“Talmadge Creek feeds into the Kalamazoo River.

“Line 6B is a 30-inch, 190,000 barrels per day (bpd) line transporting light synthetics, heavy and medium crude oil from Griffith, Ind., to Sarnia, Ontario. It is part of the Partnership’s Lakehead System. According to Enbridge, the 1,900-mile system is the U.S. portion of the world’s longest petroleum pipeline and has operated for more than 60 years. It transports crude oil from Western Canada to the United States, spanning from the international border near Neche, N.D., to the international border near Marysville, Mich., with an extension across the Niagara River into the Buffalo, N.Y., area.

“The Calhoun County Public Health Department issued a water advisory for residents with private wells living within 200 feet from the edge of the river bank between Talmadge Creek (site of oil spill) west along the Kalamazoo River to the Kalamazoo County line.

“Clearly identified Calhoun County Health Department and Michigan Department of Community Health officials and volunteers will personally visit affected homes to deliver water advisory notices.

“Residents are advised to discontinue use of their residential water well for drinking and cooking. All other household uses are acceptable at this time.”

Read more: Environmental Protection

3,000 chemical barrels washed into Chinese river

Water supplies were cut for a time to part of the north-eastern Chinese city of Jilin, after a flood washed thousands of barrels of a dangerous chemical from a factory into the area’s main river, state media said today.

“A “small quantity” of two pollutants produced by the plant were found in the Songhua river, and a reporter smelt a strange odour as he watched dozens of the metal containers float through downtown Jilin, the official Xinhua agency said.

“It was not clear how well the barrels were sealed. But the environmental protection ministry said yesterday that tests showed nothing abnormal about the water quality. It would monitor the river closely, it said.

“The latest spill was triggered when flood waters rushed through a chemical plant yesterday morning, carrying off barrels, including some of trimethyl chloro silicane, a colourless, flammable liquid with a pungent smell, Xinhua said.

“Around 3,000 barrels contained 170kg (375lb) of chemicals, and another 4,000 were empty, Xinhua said, citing a government official speaking at a news conference in Jilin. That suggested as much as 500 tonnes could potentially contaminate the river.”

Read more: The Guardian

Running dry on the Colorado

Strontia Dam

Over a hundred dams contain the river water, both inside and outside of the Colorado River Basin. Photo courtesy of Jonathan Waterman; retrieced from: Grist.org

“Climate models for the second half of this century show that up to 70 percent of the snowpack, which supplies the river 90 percent of its water, will disappear. Despite a whopping snowfall and long winter in the Upper Basin, the two biggest reservoirs created by Hoover and Glen Canyon Dams, “Lakes” Mead and Powell, are presently at half of their collective 50-maf capacities and are unlikely to recharge from the winter’s big snowfall after meeting their downstream orders to create electricity and fill irrigation ditches.

“If this nine-year drought continues on beyond a decade, as predicted, life throughout the river basin will be irrevocably changed. First, the sprawling economy created by recreational river and reservoir use throughout the river basin will go bust — crippling scores of towns and small cities along the river. Swimming pools will be drained and lawns browned in Salt Lake City, Utah; Cheyenne, Wyo.; and Albuquerque, N.M. Without Hoover Dam generating relatively clean and rapidly created hydroelectric power, Los Angeles will have blackouts. Without Glen Canyon Dam powering air conditioners, people will abandon sweltering Phoenix, necessitating the construction of more noxious, water consumptive coal plants on the far reaches of the energy grid. Several million acres of farms in the Southwest — including Imperial Valley, the fifth richest agricultural region in the country — will go fallow. Without radical change, citizens in Denver, Colo.; Las Vegas, Nev.; and San Diego, Calif., will have trouble flushing their toilets. Thirty million people will begin losing their drinking water. Finally, thanks to the antiquated Colorado River Compact, lawsuits will lock up what little water remains in what is already known as the most diverted river in the world.

“Like other states in the river basin, Colorado developed around the ability to manipulate water. Financiers knew that “water runs uphill to money,” and so does this ditch, pumped at a one percent grade over the Continental Divide.

“As evidence of this water-as-gold maxim, in Colorado, we cannot legally catch rain in our gutters to water our gardens, because Brad and I live under the doctrine of prior appropriation — or first in time, first in right — meaning that someone below us already owns the water. These rights can be bought and sold separately from whatever rights we’d like to think we own on our roofs, high above and far away from any farmer. In times of drought, the owner of the oldest water right, regardless of distance from the river or its headwaters, reserves the right to use the water. This explains why ranchers and farmers 80 miles to the west in Grand Junction, Colo., or 80 miles to the east in Fort Morgan, Colo., own the water that falls on our Carbondale or Boulder roofs.”

read more: Grist

Amazon Mega-Dam Deemed Unfeasible in Risk Scenario Analysis

Proposed Dams, Xingu Basin

Photo retrieved from: International Rivers

“Questions over the inefficiency of Belo Monte, which will produce an average of only 39 percent of its 11,233 megawatt installed capacity due to seasonal fluctuations in the river’s flow, indicate that the project’s heavy financial risks could only be solved by building additional reservoirs upstream.  The risk scenario report concludes that “construction of Belo Monte now will lead to an entirely foreseeable – some would say planned – crisis, which will exert enormous pressure for the construction of new dams upstream of Belo Monte to store water and enable the dams’ capacity to be fully used.”  Critics have long maintained that Belo Monte is only the first of a series of planned dams on the Xingu.

“Given uncertainties over the project’s economic viability, the Brazilian government has announced a series of generous perks to lure investors, including subsidized loans, tax breaks and public-guaranteed insurance.  The National Development Bank, BNDES, has committed to finance up to 80 percent of Belo Monte’s US$17 billion price tag, with interest rates of a mere 4 percent, a generous grace period and 30 years for repayment in what will be the largest loan in the bank’s history.  The bank has already issued subsidized credit totaling  US$8 billion (R$14 billion) and 50 percent tax breaks over 10 years to increase the private sector’s involvement in Belo Monte’s auction on April 20th and to entice European turbine suppliers Alstom, Andritz, and Voith-Siemens in signing with the consortium.  BNDES has repeatedly been charged with having weak social and environmental safeguards, a lack of transparency in lending decisions, and deficient public oversight mechanisms.

“Belo Monte and other mega-dams in the Amazon are not necessary.  Studies have shown that by investing in energy efficiency and alternative sources of energy, Brazil could avoid the need for huge dams in the Amazon and save billions in the process,” said Brent Millikan, Amazon Program Director at International Rivers. “This project is a government handout to large construction and energy companies, several of which are major funders of political campaigns, at the expense of the Brazilian taxpayer, indigenous people, riverbank dwellers, small farmers and the Xingu River’s incredible biodiversity.”
read more: International Rivers

Spring Chinook Salmon ‘Rescued’ from Butte Creek

Retrieved from: latimes.com

“The “rescue” of stranded spring chinook salmon on Butte Creek occurs as populations of Central Valley steelhead, Sacramento River chinook salmon, Delta smelt, longfin smelt and striped bass continue to collapse. Although water pollution, invasive species, toxic chemicals and other factors play a role in the collapse, the most significant factor in the decline of these species is massive exports of water from the California Delta to corporate agribusiness and southern California.

“State and federal fisheries staff arrived at Butte Creek on Thursday, July 15, expecting to capture and transport 75-80 spring run Chinook salmon stranded in the tributary of the Sacramento River, but they actually captured and relocated 123 of these majestic native fish.

“This “rescue” has become an annual ritual that takes place when these salmon are threatened by rising water temperatures during their annual migration. Over the past decade, two major fish kills took place on the creek, due to mismanagement by the state and federal governments and PG&E.

“Fishermen and environmentalists pointed out that the warm water temperatures that every summer plague the creek are spurred by upstream diversions – and that the agency staff had waited too long to “rescue” the fish for their efforts to be successful.”

Read more: IndyBay

Dammed if they do: China’s hydropower plans are a test of its avowed good neighbourliness

Retrieved from: The Economist

“To the engineers who dominate China’s leadership, the rivers’ wildness must seem an impertinence. On the Mekong alone China has planned or built eight dams. In Xishuangbanna the new Jinghong dam has just started operating. Further up, Xiaowan dam will be finished by 2013. It will be the highest arch dam in the world, and China’s biggest hydropower project after the Three Gorges on the middle Yangzi. The reservoir behind it is already filling up.

“In general, scrutiny of China’s water projects is scant, and the government is in a hurry. It wants to add electricity-generating capacity, lest China’s breakneck growth be impeded. Giant hydropower companies, with impeccable political connections, add their own layer of secrecy. Risks attend those who question the lack of transparency. Perhaps 500,000 locals, mainly ethnic minorities, are being displaced and forcibly resettled. Those who protest are threatened with less compensation, if not jail.

“The Chinese press steers clear of dams with a barge-pole. Academics and NGO representatives who oppose the dam-building on social or environmental grounds do not want their names published. In private even academics in favour of hydropower development complain that nearly all relevant information, even the amount of rain that reaches them, is treated as a state secret. (Though, they add, at China’s meteorological and rivers bureaus, even state secrets can be imparted if the price is right.)”

“Until recently China was no less communicative towards downstream neighbours, who have seen a sharp drop in Mekong levels in recent years. Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam complain that China neither consults nor informs them about what it is up to. For all that it preaches harmony and good neighbourliness, China comes across as a regional bully, with its foot on the Mekong’s throat. The Mekong basin is the greatest inland fishing region in the world. Distraught Thai, Laotian and Cambodian fisherman and farmers blame Chinese dams for killing off fish stocks, cutting irrigation and disrupting livelihoods. Recently a Bangkok Post editorial accused China of “Killing the Mekong”.

read more: The Economist