The Phnom Penh Post

Mekong leaders urged to act

- Post In-depth Alessandro Marazzi Sassoon

THE future of the Mekong River – and potentiall­y the food and economic security of Cambodia – is up for discussion this week, with Prime Minister Hun Sen and the leaders of Vietnam, Thailand and Laos expected to make a declaratio­n on the developmen­t of the river basin on Thursday at the end of the four-day Mekong River Commission (MRC) summit in Siem Reap.

The message conveyed to those leaders on Tuesday night, after a two-day conference with experts, civil society and country representa­tives from across the Mekong Basin, was to heed the results of the MRC’s landmark Council Study – a massive report assessing the impacts of hydropower developmen­t – as the basis for future policymaki­ng. The study’s prediction­s of the impacts on fisheries, agricultur­e and the economy across the basin if hydropower projects go through are dire – and for Cambodia, they are potentiall­y catastroph­ic.

The Council Study, a 3,600page report that was six years and millions of dollars in the making, was commission­ed by MRC countries to assess in particular the 11 proposed dams along the lower Mekong mainstream, of which three are already under constructi­on.

“Certainly the results show that if the business as usual trajectory plays out that the trade-offs to water and food impacts are going to be very dire,” said Brian Eyler of the

think tank The Stimson Center.

“We’re looking at a zero-sum gain or a negative sum gain for the region,” he continued, adding “China’s leadership needs to pay attention to this, as does the leadership downstream”. Though China is not in the MRC, it attended the summit as a “dialogue partner” along with Myanmar.

Danger of invasive species

MRC Chief Environmen­t Management Officer So Nam said conclusion­s about fish loss in the study are not only consistent with those produced by other research, but have been subjected to the scrutiny of internatio­nal experts. They find that if alteration­s made to dams are 50 percent effective in allowing for fish passage, fish biomass in the Cambodian Mekong would still drop by one fifth by 2020 and 35 percent by 2040.

Not only would there be a reduction in fish numbers, but also drastic changes in fish types – with migratory “white fish” species predicted to disappear entirely from Thailand and Laos and being pushed to the brink in Cambodia. Taking their place in large part are invasive species, which put pressure on the natural ecosystems and whose emergence, So Nam said, is nearly irreversib­le.

“It’s really a frightenin­g situation, not only from the dams but also from another human activity of stopping this introduced species,” he said.

The study also predicts that the economic benefits of hydropower would not make up for the decline of fisheries, with Nguyen Thi Ngoc Minh, a specialist at the MRC, forecastin­g a 20 percent reduction in the country’s projected GDP by 2040.

For the fishermen and farmers that depend on the river system for their food and livelihood the prospects aren’t good.

“There really could be a food security and a public health crisis that comes out of this,” said Maureen Harris of Internatio­nal Rivers.

“It’s also explicit [from the study] that the losses or the threats are being felt most by poor and vulnerable communitie­s within the basin and that the impacts will be exacerbate­d on these population­s through climate change as well,” she said.

One key finding was that mainstream dams, if built without mitigation mechanisms, would reduce sediment flow to the delta, which includes Cambodia and Vietnam, by 67 percent by 2020, and a whopping 97 percent by 2040 – a figure water security expert David Grey called “a deal-breaker” during a panel discussion.

Sopheap Lim, a modeller with the MRC, said such reduc- tions would impact rice production, as well as fish and floodplain productivi­ty, while also causing riverbank erosion. The MRC predicts $6.7 billion would be needed for r i v e r bank re i nf orc e ments between Vientiane and the delta to offset the effects.

“This really questions the viability of the delta going forward and any sustainabl­e possible ongoing agricultur­e and livelihood support in the delta, so it’s really quite catastroph­ic in terms of what this could mean,” said Harris.

Even with mitigation­s – changes to the design of dams to allow more sediment to pass – the amount reaching downstream floodplain­s would still be quite low, according to the study.

‘It’s not a river anymore’

The message to leaders at the end of Tuesday called on the need for investment­s that “sustain water-food-energy-environmen­t security”, establish and maintain protected areas in the Mekong and consider alternativ­e energy sources.

“We need to be careful, and make use of the results and further work together,” said Te Navuth, Secretary General of t h e Ca mbodi a Nat i o n a l Mekong Committee.

“Of course a serious impact will be [felt] to the downstream, Cambodian Mekong Delta, Vietnam Mekong Delta, Tonle Sap River system, fisheries, water regime, sediment,” he said.

Youk Senglong, the deputy executive director of the Fisheries Action Coalition Team (FACT), said the study only adds to a host of scientific literature that should be considered.

The changes to the river will be such that “it’s not a river anymore”, Senglong said.

“We’re afraid … because there is a close connection between the Tonle Sap great lake, which is the heart of Cambodia, and also the Mekong.”

He implored Prime Minister Hun Sen and the other Mekong leaders to carefully and fully address the findings of the Council Study in making their decisions.

A joint statement to the MRC country leaders on Wednesday from 10 countries – including Australia, the United States, Japan and Sweden – and the European Union, World Bank and Interna- tional Union for the Conservati­on of Nature, expressed concern about the study’s findings. It described the report as a “sound and neutral basis” for understand­ing the trade-offs of hydropower developmen­t.

“Given the severity of the projected impacts of planned and ongoing investment­s on fisheries, food security, health and livelihood­s, as well as the region’s commitment to the Sustainabl­e Devleopmen­t Goals, we look forward to seeing how the Member Countries translate the findings of their Council Study into policies,” the statement reads, going on to encourage member countries to “revisit their developmen­t models”.

Country delegation­s also released statements onWednesda­y, with only Thailand and Vietnam making note of the Council Study. Cambodia did acknowledg­e that food, energy and water security challenges faced are “more serious than before”, while Laos reaffirmed that its hydropower developmen­t projects, which make up 9 of 11 total projects on the mainstream, “followed the MRC procedures”.

China, which has built six dams on the Mekong in its own territory and is a major financer of hydropower developmen­t downstream said it “understand[s] and respect[s] the reasonable concern of the Mekong countries on hydropower developmen­t”.

A statement from Dr Tran Hong Ha, Vietnam’s Resources and Environmen­t Minister, explicitly called on regional government­s to heed the study and said “the sustainabi­lity of developmen­t of Mekong Basin and riparian countries, and even their existence”, depends on cooperativ­e transbound­ary water management.

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WORLD
 ?? HONG MENEA ?? Hun Sen inspects the Lower Sesan II dam when it was inaugurate­d on September 25, 2017. The dam is built on a major Mekong tributary, and is predicted to have a significan­t effect on fisheries.
HONG MENEA Hun Sen inspects the Lower Sesan II dam when it was inaugurate­d on September 25, 2017. The dam is built on a major Mekong tributary, and is predicted to have a significan­t effect on fisheries.
 ?? VOISHMEL/AFP ?? A woman watches boats passing at the Pak Beng pier on the Mekong River in northern Laos, near the site of a proposed hydropower dam.
VOISHMEL/AFP A woman watches boats passing at the Pak Beng pier on the Mekong River in northern Laos, near the site of a proposed hydropower dam.
 ?? SUPPLIED/MRC ?? Cambodia’s delegation at the Ministeria­l Meeting on Wednesday at the Mekong River Commission Summit in Siem Reap.
SUPPLIED/MRC Cambodia’s delegation at the Ministeria­l Meeting on Wednesday at the Mekong River Commission Summit in Siem Reap.

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