The Borneo Post

Montenegri­ns protest against Albanian dam on shared river

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TUZI, Montenegro: Dozens of environmen­tal activists cycled from Montenegro’s capital to the Albanian border to protest over the neighbouri­ng nation’s constructi­on of a dam on the Cijevna river that flows through both countries.

As government­s hurry to meet renewable energy goals set by the Paris climate change agreement, plans to build almost 3,000 small hydro-power plants have sparked protests across the Balkans this year.

At Saturday’s demonstrat­ion, some of the protesters carried placards reading “The Cijevna is our Fortune”. “Don’t ( put) the Cijevna in pipes,” red a banner spread along a bridge over a dry river bed, where protesters gathered.

Critics say the dams are endangerin­g Europe’s last freeflowin­g rivers, including the Cijevna, or Cem as it is called in Albanian.

“When you clog veins in a human body, a human dies; so do rivers,” said Adem Kajosaj, 60, a pensioner and fisherman from the area around the border town of Tuzi, who joined the protest.

A dam on the 60 kilometrel­ong (40-mile) river is already being built, and protesters say Albania did not request consent from authoritie­s in Montenegro or notify them about the project.

They have also criticised Montenegri­n authoritie­s for failing to lodge a protest with Albania. The two countries signed a deal on joint water management earlier this year.

Authoritie­s and investors say boosting hydro power will reduce regional dependency on coal and comply with European Union energy policies. All the countries of the Western Balkans – Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia, Kosovo, Macedonia and Albania – want to join the bloc.

Most of the small hydro plants in the region produce no more than one megawatt (MW) each - roughly enough to power 750 homes, but environmen­talists say they disrupt fish migration routes and pose a threat to dozens of species, including the Danube Salmon and Balkan Lynx.

In southern Bosnia on Saturday, villagers protested over the constructi­on of two dams on the river Doljanka by a company owned by NBA former player Mirza Teletovic.

“Ninety-five per cent of villagers in the area where Doljanka flows have signed a petition against the mini hydro plants, which would destroy local community’s plans to develop fly- fishing and sport fishing,” the Coalition for the protection of rivers in Bosnia, the non- government­al organisati­on ( NGO), said in a statement. — Reuters

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