The Phnom Penh Post

Chinese firms improving social protection­s: study

- Cristina Maza

GRASSROOTS mobilisati­on has successful­ly pressured Chinese dam operators to adopt social safeguards in countries like Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar, according to a new study in the journal Energy Policy, though one observer yesterday said the firms still had much room for improvemen­t.

Over the past 15 years, China began working to protect its reputation as an internatio­nal player in large dam developmen­t by adopting norms and standards to protect local population­s, the study’s authors concluded. That’s largely because social mobilisati­on and pressure from non-profits have convinced Chinese stateowned enterprise­s and banks that it’s more costly not to meet these standards.

The authors define “social safeguards” as policies that ensure people who are affected by the project benefit from it, and are consulted throughout the project’s duration.

“We find that social safeguard norms adopted have significan­tly changed in the past 15 years,” the study reads. “Chinese dam developers nowadays claim to adhere to various internatio­nal social safeguard norms, with China Three Gorges Corporatio­n and Sinohydro both publicly committing not to build any projects without an ESIA [Environmen­tal Social Impact Assessment].”

According to the report, the suspension of the Myitsone dam in Myanmar in 2008 was a game changer, because it demonstrat­ed that project suspension was a credible threat.

Previously, Chinese companies adhered more frequently to local environmen­tal laws rather than internatio­nal standards. But in countries like Cambodia and Myanmar, this was largely meaningles­s due to the lack of relevant legislatio­n. Cambodia didn’t pass a set of environmen­tal and social safeguards until 2010, the report notes.

But according to Pianporn Deetes of the non-profit Internatio­nal Rivers, many China- run dams still fail to live up to internatio­nal standards.

“In the Mekong countries including Cambodia, environmen­tal standards still need to be improved,” Deetes said. “Informatio­n and data is also difficult to obtain when Chinese companies act as contractor­s, and therefore are responsibl­e uniquely for carrying out the work, and not responsibl­e for completing [environmen­tal and social assessment­s], or any public participat­ion.”

And even if internatio­nal standards are met, observers haven’t reached a consensus about how stringent those standards should be. About 75 percent of NGOs surveyed said current projects performed poorly from a social safeguards perspectiv­e.

 ?? KHOUTH SOPHAK CHAKRYA ?? A view of the Chinese-built Kamchay Hydropower Dam in Kampot province.
KHOUTH SOPHAK CHAKRYA A view of the Chinese-built Kamchay Hydropower Dam in Kampot province.

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