Global Times

Baihetan dam project begins constructi­on

- By Cao Siqi

China on Thursday began constructi­on on the world’s second- largest hydropower station on the upper reaches of the Yangtze River, amid environmen­talists’ concerns over river pollution and geological damage.

Located on the downstream Jinsha River where Ningnan county of Southwest China’s Sichuan Province borders Qiaojia county of Yunnan Province, the Baihetan Hydropower Project ( Baihetan), with a planned capacity of 16 gigawatts, began the constructi­on of the dam after over 16 years of survey and preparatio­n, according to a statement sent by China Three Gorges Corporatio­n on Thursday.

Following the constructi­on of Xiluodu, the world’s third- largest hydropower station, and Xiangjiaba, China’s third- largest hydropower station, the constructi­on of Baihetan marks another milestone in China’s energy developmen­t, said the statement.

According to the statement, Baihetan has a normal impounding level of 820 meters and a correspond­ing reservoir capacity of 17.9 billion cubic meters. The station could generate an average of 62.4 billion kilowatt- hours of electricit­y annually, which is equal to two- thirds of Beijing’s electricit­y consumptio­n in 2015.

However, the dam, located in a seismic fracture zone, has triggered grave concerns among Chinese environmen­talists and geologists.

Wang Yongchen, a 62- year- old journalist­turned- environmen­talist, said that her team, consisting of several environmen­tal journalist­s and experts, conducted some research on the dam in 2015 and found that along with the water storage and blow- off, the reservoir sediments and fragile geological elements ( such as mud rock flows) may cause tremendous damage to the land.

The decision to build the dam has also spurred frantic exploratio­n of local mines. Some of the mining is led by small factories which have no awareness of environmen­tal protection, therefore, a large amount of heavy metal material has been dumped into the Jinsha River’s tributary, eventually moved into the Jinsha River, seriously polluting the water, said Wang.

But China Three Gorges Corporatio­n said in the Thursday statement that the station will play an important role in restoring the eco- environmen­t of the Yangtze River. “It could help reduce consumptio­n of coal for 19.68 million tons as well as emissions of carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide,” according to the statement.

In 2016, Chinese President Xi Jinping stressed on ecological protection and “green developmen­t” in boosting the growth of the Yangtze River Economic Belt. Restoring its ecological environmen­t will be an overwhelmi­ng task and no large- scale developmen­t will be allowed along the river at present and for a rather long period to come, Xi said.

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