In an unexpected decision yesterday, Lower Mekong countries
opened a two-day meeting in Bangkok by jointly agreeing a controversial hydropower dam must undergo regional consultation but could continue construction.Laos’s delegation to the Mekong River
Commission – the intergovernmental body responsible for facilitating
cooperation along the river – announced that it would yield to
neighbouring countries’ demands and submit its Don Sahong Hydropower
Project to further evaluation by member countries.
The Lao government representatives made it clear, however, that they
were not willing to halt construction on the $300 million project
located less than 2 kilometres north of Cambodia.
“This is a problem, because it means that the most influence the
other countries can hope to have is to provide input on how it is built
and what sort of mitigation measures are used,” said Ame Trandem,
Southeast Asia program director at International Rivers. “But under international law, affected countries have the right to request more studies and have a say in the project before it moves forward.”Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam have all requested that the Don Sahong’s Malaysian developers Mega First Corporation
Berhad postpone assembly until transboundary impact assessments could
be conducted to determine what kind of effects the dam may have on the
60 million residents relying on the Mekong, as well as several volatile
migratory fish species. But the developers have so far not complied.
“There are options to sustainably manage the water resource
that will allow [the countries] to meet power demands while conserving
the ecological integrity of the Mekong,” said Marc Goichot, hydropower
specialist at World Wildlife Foundation. “We do not need to take inconsiderable risks with Lower Mekong mainstream dams.”The Don Sahong is the second of nine hydropower dams that Laos plans
to use to boost its economy, which is currently the smallest of the
ASEAN states.
Earlier this week, the Thai courts accepted a lawsuit against the
first of Laos’s dams, the 1,285-megawatt Xayaburi dam, based in part on
the lack of scientific study proving that it would not harm downstream
villagers.
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