Friday, January 18, 2013

a proposal for a Chinese power company to build a dam at Sambor

Vietnam and Cambodia tell Laos to stop $3.5bn Mekong River dam project


Food security issues lead to disagreement over concerns that dam will hit livelihood of tens of millions

Mekong River in Vientiane, Laos
An abandoned toilet bowl sits on steps on the banks of the Mekong river, as a Laos fisherman fishes, at the river front of Vientiane. Photograph: Barbara Walton/EPA
Vietnam urged Laos to halt construction of a $3.5bn (£2.2bn) hydropower dam on Mekong River pending further study, environmental activists said on Friday.
Cambodia, downriver from the Xayaburi dam, accused Laos of failing to consult on the project, activists said. The Mekong River commission (MRC), made up of member states Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand, held a three-day meeting in northern Laos to discuss river development projects.
The dam in northern Laos, the first of 11 planned for the lower Mekong River running through south-east Asia, threatens the livelihood of tens of millions who depend on the river's aquatic resources, activists say.
"Vietnam requested that no further developments on the Mekong mainstream occur until the ... dams study agreed upon at least year's council meeting is completed," International Rivers, an NGO devoted to river conservation, said in a statement.
"The Cambodian delegation asserted that Laos had misinterpreted the Mekong agreement." Officials from Cambodia and Vietnam were not available for comment.
The MRC is bound by treaty to hold inter-governmental consultations before dams are built. But members have no veto.
"In the absence of an agreement, other countries can disagree if they like but this can't stop Laos," said Jian-hua Meng, a specialist in sustainable hydropower at the World Wildlife Fund. "The role of the MRC is now being questioned along with the level of investment put in the organisation."
In December 2011, MRC member states agreed to conduct new environmental impact assessments before construction proceeded, but last August Ch Karnchang PCL, the Thai construction company behind the project, said it had resumed work.
A groundbreaking ceremony in November signalled the formal start of construction, said Meng.
Ch Karnchang's 50%-owned subsidiary, Xayaburi Power Co, has received a 29-year concession from the Laotian government to operate the dam's power plant and Thailand is set to buy 95% of the electricity generated.
Milton Osborne of the Lowy Institute, an Australian foreign policy thinktank, said Xayaburi marked a turning-point that would enable others to build their own dams, including Cambodia.
He described as a "monstrous disaster" a proposal for a Chinese power company to build a dam at Sambor in northeastern Cambodia, on a tributary of the Mekong. "It would be so disastrous, blocking one of the main fish migratory systems," he said.
Laos, Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia share the lower stretches of the 2,500-mile (4,000km ) Mekong. Activists say dams could threaten food security in Cambodia and Vietnam.
The river provides up to 80% of the animal protein consumed in Cambodia and sediment and changes to river flow threaten the Mekong Delta, which contributes half of Vietnam's agricultural GDP.
Cambodia approved its own hydroelectric dams in November.
A second Cambodian project, the Lower Sesan dam in northern Stung Treng province, is a joint venture between Cambodian, Chinese and Vietnamese companies. Campaigners say it would reduce the fish catch in a country with malnutrition issues.

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