The Phnom Penh Post

New dam on Mekong looms

- Cristina Maza

RE P R E S E N TAT I V E S from Cambodia, Laos, Thailand andVietnam gathered in Vientiane on Thursday to launch a sixmonth consultati­on process on what would be the third mainstream hydropower dam in Laos’s Lower Mekong River.

Laos first signalled its intention to move ahead with the proposed 912-megawatt Pak Beng dam in November. Thursday’s meeting, part of a 1995 agreement that aims to promote the sustainabl­e developmen­t of the Mekong area, set the roadmap for how the four neighbours will assess the environmen­tal and social impacts of the project over the coming months.

“We will have an assessment of the project document and hire internatio­nal experts to assist with the evaluation,” confirmed Te Navuth, a member of the Cambodian National Mekong Committee who attended the meeting.

The process was devised by the Mekong River Commission (MRC) to give regional states a say over developmen­t projects that could have cross-border impacts. But critics say it has in practice had little influence over whether a country moves ahead with a project, and is often used to give controvers­ial hydropower dams a veneer of legitimacy.

“Unfortunat­ely, experience has shown that the procedure is flawed, and is inadequate to ensure environmen­tal impacts are properly assessed and factored into decision-making,” Maureen Harris, Southeast Asia program director at Internatio­nal Rivers, said via email yesterday.

“With both the Xayaburi and Don Sahong Dams, serious concerns over impacts and requests for informatio­n were never transparen­tly addressed, and no agreement could be reached between the government­s on resolution of the process.”

What’s more, Harris noted that the process focuses heavily on individual hydropower projects, and often fails to consider the cumulative effects of the many dams springing up along the Mekong.

Pak Beng’s reservoir will flood villages and alter ecosystems, Harris noted. But there’s also concern the dam would compound problems from already existing projects.

Meanwhile, Chea Phallika, an environmen­tal consultant who studies hydropower, highlighte­d the Mekong River Commission’s top-down approach, noting that it’s important local stakeholde­rs also be consulted during environmen­tal impact assessment­s (EIAs).

Civil society groups are currently formulatin­g new regional guidelines on public participat­ion in EIAs, Phallika added.

“I think it is a good platform to involve all of the relevant stakeholde­rs, and then the government can see the concerns,” she said.

In the meantime, the MRC will organise a regional stakeholde­r meeting in February and a fact-finding visit to Pak Beng in April, the commission said in a statement.

 ??  ?? Boats dock on the bank of the Mekong River in northern Laos earlier last year at the planned constructi­on site for the Pak Beng Dam.
Boats dock on the bank of the Mekong River in northern Laos earlier last year at the planned constructi­on site for the Pak Beng Dam.

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