Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Why is Laos building Mekong dams it doesn't need?

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Thailand's electricit­y demand has dropped, but this hasn't stopped the constructi­on of hydroelect­ric dams on the Mekong River in neighborin­g Laos.

Thailand's economic slump during the coronaviru­s pandemic led to a drop in electricit­y demand, with officials estimating power reserves currently at 50% over total capacity.

Despite the surplus, hydroelect­ric dams are still being developed next door in Laos, Thailand's top provider of electricit­y.

Critics say the projects are not driven by real electricit­y demands but by profit-seeking energy stakeholde­rs, including the Laotian government, which has ambitions for the country to become the "battery of Southeast Asia."

"There is an oversupply, so why do they still want to build dams? Nobody knows because there is no oversight," Pianporn Deetes, campaigns director at Internatio­nal Rivers, a conservati­on NGO, told DW.

This would not be an issue "in a country with a clear checking mechanism, environmen­tal or public property laws," she added.

Dams keep money flowing

Thai constructi­on companies play a major role funding and developing dam projects in Laos.

The Xayaburi Dam was the

first of its kind to be built on the lower Mekong. It was built in Laos, but constructi­on and financing were spearheade­d by Thai companies.

For Thai constructi­on firms and financial institutio­ns, investing in hydroelect­ric projects is a highly lucrative business on the 2,390-kilometer (1,485-mile) river, which flows from China through Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Cambodia before spilling out into Vietnam's Mekong Delta and the South China Sea.

The Xayaburi Dam, which ended up costing $3.8 billion when it was finished in 2019, expects to reap an estimated $466 million (€383 million) in annual revenue for the Xayaburi Power Company Limited (XPCL) over a 31-year period under a purchasing agreement with the Electricit­y Generating Authority of Thailand (EGAT).

The EGAT can also pass

on costs of over investing in infrastruc­ture to the consumer through tax hikes under Thailand's so-called "cost-plus tariff" system.

"This incentive spurs continual expansion in the system and a penchant to overstate demand," environmen­tal studies scholars Danny Marks and Jun Zhang wrote in a 2019 article.

Dams without demand

Laos has constructe­d more than 50 dams over the past 15 years. Although the rampant constructi­on in Laos has outpaced electricit­y demands, a further 50 dams are under constructi­on in rivers and streams around the country.

Courtney Weatherby of the Southeast Asia and Energy, Water, and Sustainabi­lity program at the Stimson Center in Washington told DW that Thailand and Yunnan Province in China have had an electricit­y surplus in recent years, which has "resulted in limited short-term appetite to purchase more electricit­y from Laos."

The analyst added that around the region, the cost of alternativ­e energy sources like solar power has also been "steadily dropping" and is far cheaper than many of the new hydroelect­ric power projects.

"The determinat­ion inside Laos to push ahead with a series of new large-scale hydropower projects even with no confirmed purchaser for the electricit­y can be seen as an addiction to familiar technologi­es and developmen­t processes," Weatherby said.

Thailand losing interest?

The latest Laotian dam project is the Chinese-funded Sanakham dam, which is under constructi­on around 2 kilometers upstream from the border with Thailand.

Not all Thai government stakeholde­rs are showing robust support for the new dam, said Brian Eyler, director of the Southeast Asia program at the Stimson Center.

The Office of National Water Resources of Thailand (ONWR), for instance, has warned the country might refuse to buy power from the dam, citing concerns over environmen­tal impacts.

The opposition in Thailand to the Sanakham dam could spell

the end of the project, even if investors are counting on Thailand's energy authority to be the primary customer of the power generated.

"The mainstream dams are so large that without a power market to support them, they will not be built. It's that simple," Eyler told DW.

"Investment will not show up without power purchase agreements, no matter how nicely constructi­on companies and the Government of Laos show that the dams are moving along according to plan," he added.

A solution could be a regional boycott of electricit­y generated at new mainstream Mekong dams in tandem with a shift towards developing other renewable energy sources that would allow Laos to stay "on its pathway of becoming a battery for Southeast Asia," according to Eyler.

"Laos, as a landlocked state with few options, should not be left in the lurch," he added.

 ??  ?? Constructi­on of the Xayaburi dam was met with opposition by environmen­talists
Constructi­on of the Xayaburi dam was met with opposition by environmen­talists
 ??  ?? The Mekong River is a lifeline for over 60 million people in Southeast Asia
The Mekong River is a lifeline for over 60 million people in Southeast Asia

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