Thursday, December 15, 2011

Analysis: No stopping big hydro projects, despite Lao veto/Reuters

Analysis: No stopping big hydro projects, despite Lao veto

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/12/14/us-dams-idUSTRE7BD0GN20111214
By Niluksi Koswanage

KUALA LUMPUR | Wed Dec 14, 2011 8:56am EST

(Reuters) - A surge in mega-hydropower projects across the world in
the coming decade will only be affected marginally by last week's
decision to delay building a large dam across the Mekong, Southeast
Asia's longest river.

Hydropower remains a proven way to produce electricity on a large
scale, and some governments are extremely reluctant to opt for
alternatives such as nuclear. But last week's decision could mean
there will be increased focus on minimizing environmental and social
costs of new hydro projects, analysts say.

Laos suspended the $3.5 billion Xayaburi dam project on the lower
Mekong, awaiting a study into the environmental impact of the river,
the world's largest inland fishery.

The 1,260-megawatt project has been hugely controversial and
underlined growing global concerns that mega-dams were a damaging and
outdated way of generating power. Protests from India to Brazil and
Malaysia to China have called for a halt to massive building programs.

"The decision is certainly a game changer in the lower Mekong," said
Marc Goichot, who works for environmental group WWF's Greater Mekong
program on sustainable hydropower.

"We hope this decision will have influence in the rest of Asia," he
told Reuters in an e-mail from the Lao capital Vientiane.

But he added it was hard to pinpoint whether the decision was related
to environmental concerns or something else. In September, Myanmar
scrapped a $3.6 billion Chinese-led mega-dam across the Irrawaddy
River also after environmental worries, but the decision was
additionally seen as an attempt by its government to distance itself
from Beijing.

"(Last week's) decision also raises the risk profile of these projects
for investors, which will undoubtedly scare some investors away or
make them more hesitant to fund mainstream dams in the future," said
Aviva Imhof, campaigns director at International Rivers, an NGO which
opposes large hydropower dams.

"Unfortunately, it's unlikely that the decision will affect dams (now)
being built in other parts of Asia or even on tributaries of the
Mekong river," she said.

The World Bank, a major hydropower investor, says the social and
environmental costs of such projects have to be addressed and resolved
at the planning stage -- a failure to do so can sharply increase the
impact.

Laos, Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia share the lower reaches of the
Mekong.

Concern has grown after China completed a series of dams on the upper
reaches, with more planned, causing lower flows during the wet season
and greater flows during droughts, Imhof said.

The Chinese dams also block sediment flowing downstream, causing
massive erosion and affecting productivity of floodplain agriculture
and in the Mekong Delta, she told Reuters in an e-mail.

The Three Gorges Dam, the world's largest hydropower plant at 22.5
gigawatts when it reaches full capacity, is a symbol of China's quest
for energy and is also a taste of what is to come.

A total of 1.25 million people were displaced over 16 years for the
Three Gorges dam, leading to widespread criticism and protests. Many
blamed the project for widespread drought earlier this year in
downstream areas of the Yangtze River.

COAL UNFASHIONABLE, NUCLEAR A WORRY

With countries trying to limit greenhouse gas emissions from coal and
other fossil-fuel based power plants, and questions over nuclear
power, China and the world's other energy-hungry nations are turning
to hydro in a big way.

China wants to raise installed power capacity by 470 gigawatts (GW) to
1,437 GW by 2015 -- the largest in the world. At least 110 gigawatts
of the new capacity will be from hydro power -- equivalent to five
Three Gorges hydropower projects. Current hydropower capacity is 216
GW, also the world's largest.

Earlier this year, the country said it has committed 400 billion yuan
($62 billion) to build four hydropower stations that would contribute
43 GW by 2015, to be built by China Three Gorges Corp.

Longer-term plans call for China to reach 450 GW of hydropower
capacity by 2030. That will involve tapping the largely untouched
Tibetan plateau, the source of major rivers that feed nations
downstream.

This has triggered distrust at home and in Southeast Asia and a test
case will be if China gives the go-ahead in the coming weeks to a
series of dams on the Nu, or Salween, river that flows through
China's Yunnan province and then Myanmar and Thailand.

India, which generates 18 percent of its electricity from hydropower,
is implementing a large-hydro plan totaling 50 GW, or roughly
Australia's total generating capacity. Government data shows that
India has potential hydropower capacity of 148.7 GW, with 33.9 GW
developed and a further 14.6 GW on the way.

But India's hydropower program has also been dogged by protests,
especially a decades-long project along the Narmada river in central
India. The scheme proposes 30 dams, with two large dams built and a
third under construction for power and large-scale irrigation.

In the northeast state of Arunachal Pradesh, a planned 11 GW dam on
the Siang river has run into environmental problems and objections
from neighboring China. The government is looking to build it further
downstream and, if completed, it would be India's largest hydropower
dam.

"Hydropower has issues of resettlement, which is the most serious, it
has issues of biodiversity conservation," said Pradipto Ghosh, former
top civil servant in the environment ministry, and member of the prime
minister's panel on climate change.

"But the point is that hydropower is very much part of the energy mix
and it will continue to remain part of the energy mix," he told Reuters.

"We have to address these issues," he said. "The way that hydropower
projects are now designed and implemented is a far cry from how they
were back in the 1950s."

MALAYSIAN PROTESTS

Malaysia, which generates most of its power with fossil fuels, is
pushing ahead with a huge hydropower program in Sarawak state on
Borneo island that is displacing indigenous communities, disrupting
river flows and triggering deep anger.

The 2.4 GW Bakun dam, which started generating power this year, is by
far the nation's most controversial project with more than 100 cases
still pending in Malaysia's courts. The dam was first proposed in
1960s and shelved twice.

It is the second highest concrete faced rockfill dam in the world at
207 meters high (680 feet), with a reservoir roughly the size of
Singapore.

Much of the power will feed an industrial zone with another 12 dams to
be built to feed industries such as smelters and solar panel
manufacturers.

"The building of these monuments of corruption will be a key issue
that we will bring up in the upcoming elections. I believe the
unhappiness among the local tribal communities is growing," said Baru
Bian, a land rights lawyer in Sarawak.

"I think if the people of Sarawak can appreciate how international
pressure has forced Laos to delay the Mekong dam project ... there is
a possibility of stopping these projects," Bian, who is also an
opposition politician with Anwar Ibrahim's People's Justice Party,
told Reuters.

FULL CAPACITY

But a senior government official with knowledge of the Sarawak's
hydropower plans denied the concerns of local communities have been
ignored.

"We would not proceed if there is a big risk and so far there has not
been any major risk," the official said. "We expect the opposition to
use the Laos issue to campaign for stopping the dams. But it is a
completely different scenario in Laos."

The International Energy Agency says the technical potential for
hydropower globally is five times current production based on 2008 data.

It said China had developed 24 percent of its potential, the United
States 16 percent and Brazil 25 percent and that by 2050, global
hydropower generation could nearly double.

For China, India, Brazil, the Democratic Republic of Congo and others,
that means more dam developments in a world where nations are under
pressure to cut fossil fuel emissions. Brazil approved the 11.2 GW
Belo Monte dam, the world's third largest, in June, while the DRC and
South Africa last month signed a deal for a multi-billion dollar
project.

"I think eventually there will be real problems. The whole hydropower
sector is now in full gear and at full capacity to expand as fast as
it can," said Ma Jun, director of the Institute of Public and
Environmental Affairs, which monitors China's water supplies.

"We are pressing to the very corners of our territory. If they
continue at this speed, quite soon they are going to finish the
damming of all our major rivers and at that time, the whole industry
will hit a wall," he said.

(Additional reporting by David Stanway in Beijing, Frank Jack Daniel
in New Delhi, Biswajyoti Das in Guwahati and David Fogarty in
Singapore; Writing by David Fogarty; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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