Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

India plans dam on Brahmaputr­a river to offset China’s advances

ON MONDAY, CHINESE STATE MEDIA REPORTED THE COUNTRY COULD BUILD A MAJOR DAM ON A SECTION OF THE BRAHMAPUTR­A

- Reuters letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI : India is considerin­g a plan to build a 10 gigawatts (GW) hydropower project in a remote eastern state, an Indian official said on Tuesday, following reports that China could construct dams on a section of the Brahmaputr­a river.

The river, also known as the Yarlung Tsangbo in China, flows from Tibet into India’s Arunachal Pradesh state and down through Assam to Bangladesh. Indian authoritie­s are concerned Chinese projects could trigger flash floods or create water scarcity. “The need of the hour is to have a big dam in Arunachal Pradesh to mitigate the adverse impact of the Chinese dam projects,” TS Mehra, a senior official in India’s water ministry, told Reuters.

“Our proposal is under considerat­ion at the highest level in the government,” Mehra said, adding the Indian plan would create a large water storage capacity to offset the impact of Chinese dams on flows.

Diplomatic relations between

India and China are at a nadir, with troops locked in a border face-off in the western Himalayas for months.

Some analysts warned that damming the Brahmaputr­a could potentiall­y develop into another flashpoint, as Beijing’s dam building activities moved closer to the Indian border.

“India is facing China’s terrestria­l aggression in the Himalayas, maritime encroachme­nts on its backyard and, as the latest news is a reminder, even water wars,” Brahma Chellaney, a specialist on India-China ties, said in a tweet.

On Monday, Chinese state media reported the country could build up to 60 GW of hydropower capacity on a section of the Brahmaputr­a, citing a senior executive.

Yan Zhiyong, chairman of state-owned Power Constructi­on Corporatio­n of China, speaking at an industry conference, said plans to dam the river were a “historic opportunit­y”.

“Formally, we are telling them (the Chinese) that any project you undertake, should not cause an adverse impact on India. They have given an assurance, but we don’t know how long that will last,” Mehra said.

Hydro projects on Asia’s great rivers have been a growing source of regional tensions in recent years. In Southeast Asia, China has faced accusation­s a series of dams it has built on the Mekong have worsened drought in downstream countries, which Beijing denies.

India would be concerned if the Chinese built a dam around a so-called “great bend”, where the Yarlung curves southward before entering India and where the river gains substantia­l volume of water, said Sayanangsh­u Modak, a researcher at the NewDelhi based Observer Research Foundation think-tank.

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