Deutsche Welle (English edition)

How Mekong River is turning into a new flashpoint in Indo-Pacific

Experts view the South China Sea as the most probable area of conflict in Asia. Their attention now has also turned to the Mekong River, where the economic and environmen­tal stakes are arguably much higher.

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For several years, US politician­s have adopted the Japanese slogan of a "free and open Indo-Pacific," calling for internatio­nal law to apply over disputes in the South China Sea, where China is accused of acting aggressive­ly.

Earlier this month, during the East Asia Summit foreign ministers' meeting, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken called for "a free and open Mekong."

The latest slogan points to the Mekong River's importance to peace and stability in mainland Southeast Asia, as well as China's alleged ambition to gain geopolitic­al advantage from riparian disputes.

The Mekong River begins in China's Tibetan Plateau and runs through Myanmar, Laos, Thailand and Cambodia before exiting in Vietnam's delta region. Hundreds of hydropower dams have been built up and down the river since 2010, and most of them are in China and Laos.

Laos, the poorest member of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) bloc and a landlocked state without much of a manufactur­ing sector, has recorded a 7% GDP growth on average for much of the past decade, thanks in large part to exporting hydropower-generated electricit­y.

Environmen­tal catastroph­e overshadow­ed by political agenda

However, dam-building has resulted in environmen­tal destructio­n and accusation­s of forced evictions and land-clearing across the region.

When part of a dam collapsed in southern Laos in 2018, at least 40 people were killed and hundreds of households in the region were affected by flooding.

Thailand and Vietnam now also say they are experienci­ng unusual flooding and droughts because of damming on upstream parts of the Mekong.

Pianporn Deetes, the Thailand and Myanmar campaigns director for Internatio­nal Rivers, a global NGO, argues that an increased American and Chinese interest in Mekong has made the debate "more politicize­d and polarized."

The concerns of riparian communitie­s, she adds, are "being overshadow­ed or sidelined by political agenda."

Critics say that China could threaten to intentiona­lly hold back much of the river's water upstream, producing extreme droughts in Thailand and Vietnam, as a way of pressuring Bangkok and Hanoi to accept Beijing's geopolitic­al aims. In late July, Chinese hackers allegedly stole data on the Mekong River from Cambodia's Foreign Ministry servers.

On the other hand, increased funding from US and China-led initiative­s to government­s and institutio­ns in the region has "contribute­d to greater public attention and debate on issues critical to the future of the Mekong River and its people," Deetes told DW.

Can the US and China cooperate?

On August 2, US Secretary of State Blinken co- hosted the second ministeria­l meeting of the Mekong-US Partnershi­p, created in 2020 to expand the work of a previous forum, the Lower Mekong Initiative. The Beijing-led LancangMek­ong Cooperatio­n forum was formed in 2016.

"The US emphasis on transparen­cy and inclusivit­y as part of its Mekong-US Partnershi­p is enabling productive outcomes in the Mekong region and decreasing China's accountabi­lity gap in its own backyard," said Brian Eyler, director of the Stimson Center's Southeast Asia program.

There are even claims that despite the conflict, the Mekong River could be one issue on which Beijing and Washington see eye-to-eye. "Environmen­tal conservati­on of the Mekong is actually a major area of alignment for both the US and China," Cecilia Han Springer, a senior researcher with the Global China Initiative at the Global Developmen­t Policy Center, told DW.

Tensions within Southeast Asia

Susanne Schmeier, an associate professor in Water Law and Diplomacy at IHE Delft, identifies two main tensions between China and the Southeast Asian states, and among the Southeast Asian states themselves.

"The data shows that Thailand is the biggest investor in hydropower dams in Laos, building four times as many dams as China," said Eyler.

Thailand is also the biggest importer of electricit­y generated by Laos' hydropower dams. But there is already an excess of power generated by the dams in Laos, so Vientiane has "a tall order ahead" to find markets for that power, Eyler added. "It would be wise to pause future dam building until this supplydema­nd problem is worked out."

Deetes said, "As a key financier and buyer of electricit­y from Mekong mainstream and tributary dams in Laos, Thailand has a key role to play to reduce impacts on the Mekong and its people."

In February 2020, the Thai government ended the Chinaled Lancang-Mekong Navigation Channel Improvemen­t Project over its possible social and environmen­tal impacts.

In January this year, Thai authoritie­s rejected the new technical report issued by the Chinese developers of the $2 billion (€1.7 billion) Sanakham dam project in Laos, arguing it didn't assess the environmen­tal impact of downstream communitie­s, mostly those in Thailand itself.

"Thailand should be more proactive in addressing the impacts of the Lancang cascade, including working with other Mekong countries, to advocate for the changes in the ways the dams are operated to reduce impacts on the river and communitie­s downstream," said Deetes.

Economic dependence on China

But how much influence other Southeast Asian states have over Laos remains in doubt. The bigger problem is whether Laos, as the so-called battery of Asia, could wean its economy off reliance on hydropower investment­s and exports.

Unlike its neighbors, Laos doesn't have a large low-cost manufactur­ing sector. Its exports to the US and the European Union are negligible. The EU imported just €300 million worth of goods from Laos last year, according to European Commission data. Instead, the Lao economy remains heavily dependent on hydropower exports, mining and farming.

"I do not think Laos is likely to divert from its current strategy as the export of hydropower to neighborin­g countries provides a reliable and promising source of income," said Schmeier.

Neither, Schmeier adds, does Laos' government have many incentives to diversify its economy. The developmen­t of dams provides various opportunit­ies for "additional personal income" for government officials and other actors, she noted.

And China, one of Laos' closest political allies and trade partners, is a key investor in these projects.

Concerns have been expressed that Laos' considerab­le debt to China puts it at risk of Beijing's alleged "debt-trap diplomacy," which could force it to sell important state assets away to China in lieu of repayments.

In 2020, a Chinese firm effectivel­y took control of Laos' domestic electricit­y grid.

After cataloguin­g the 100 largest hydropower projects in the Mekong region, Springer found that most of the hydropower projects in Laos plan to export up to 90% of electricit­y generated abroad. However, she adds, other renewable sources of energy, such as wind and solar, "can meet much of Laos' electricit­y demand with similar revenue streams and less capital investment than if the current hydropower pipeline was built."

 ??  ?? The Mekong River begins in China's Tibetan Plateau and runs through Myanmar, Laos, Thailand and Cambodia before exiting in Vietnam's delta region
The Mekong River begins in China's Tibetan Plateau and runs through Myanmar, Laos, Thailand and Cambodia before exiting in Vietnam's delta region
 ??  ?? China, one of Laos' closest political allies and trade partners, is a key investor in Mekong River projects
China, one of Laos' closest political allies and trade partners, is a key investor in Mekong River projects

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