By Lawrence Del Gigante
The Jakarta Globe
August 20, 2012
The Cambodian government has committed to the construction of five dams
along the Mekong River in order to meet a huge demand for electricity,
but environmental groups warn that severe repercussions loom for this
strategy.
“While each project proposed in Cambodia comes with a
different set of impacts, large dams are likely to widen the gap between
the rich and the poor, increase malnourishment levels and lead to an
environmentally unsustainable future,” Ame Trandem, South East Asia
program director for International Rivers, told IPS.
Four dam
projects have been approved so far in Cambodia, with one already
operational. All are being developed by Chinese companies on
build-operate-transfer agreements, according to Trandem.
The
Mekong River runs through six countries, including China and Vietnam,
most of which are planning the construction of hydroelectric dams.
“The
plans to build a cascade of 11 Mekong mainstream dams is one of the
greatest threats currently facing Cambodia,” said Trandem.
The
mandate on planning and development of hydropower in Cambodia lies
within the ministry of industry, mines and energy, which did not respond
to requests for comment.
Another danger of damming the Mekong is
the threat to the Mekong delta, an extremely fertile area of land which
is responsible for much of the region’s rice supply.
“As the
Mekong River feeds and employs millions of people in the region for
free, it would be irresponsible to proceed with the Xayaburi and other
mainstream dams,” said Trandem.
The Mekong is one of the only
rivers in the world to reverse its flow in the dry season. This natural
mechanism buffers the intrusion of salt water from the South China Sea
into the delta, and could be upset by upstream development.
Dams
also block fish migration routes, alter flows, and change aquatic
habitats, so these projects are also likely to have an adverse effect on
Cambodia’s fisheries.
“The Mekong River Commission’s Strategic
Environmental Assessment warned that more than one million
fisheries-dependent people in Cambodia would lose their livelihoods and
even more would suffer from food insecurity,” said Trandem.
“The loss of even a small percentage of the Mekong’s fisheries can represent in a loss of tens of millions of dollars.”
Partnerships
have been established between the countries through which the Mekong
runs in order to prevent over-harvesting of the river’s resources.
However, China is not a signatory to the 1995 Mekong Agreement, and can
effectively build these projects independently from downstream
countries. The dams in Cambodia are being financed by Chinese investors.
“The impacts of these projects are already being felt downstream,” said Trandem.
Hydroelectricity, even if a successful venture, will not solve the country’s electrification problems, other analysts say.
“Right
now it is relatively catastrophic, the power situation in the country,”
Alexander Ochs, the director of climate and energy at the
Washington-based Worldwatch Institute, told IPS.
Cambodia has one
of the lowest electrification rates in Southeast Asia, estimated at
only 24 percent, according to the Asian Development Bank (ADB).
The
government aims to raise the national electrification rate to 70
percent by 2020, according to the ADB, by expanding the grid and
sourcing more than half of the needed electricity from the Mekong River.
A
large complication is transmitting the electricity, with only the major
cities and surrounding areas having access to power lines, meaning
people in rural areas will not benefit from the hydro.
“The
number of people that are really connected to a grid as we know it, a
modern power service or energy line, in rural areas is as little as
seven percent of the population. Overall, nationwide, it’s about 15
percent,” said Ochs.
Biomass is very popular for heating and cooking, predominantly burning wood for fires and stoves.
“Everything
else comes from off-grid or micro-grid diesel generators and this is
very inefficient and very costly, a very expensive, very dirty way to
produce electricity,” said Ochs.
Currently, 91 percent of
Cambodia’s power plants are fueled by imported light diesel and heavy
fuel oil, not including the diesel it takes to fuel stand-alone
generators.
“All of this happens in a country where you have
incredible renewable energy potential. It has amazing potential for
wind, very, very good potential for solar,” said Ochs.
Importantly,
the solar potential in Cambodia is very high where it’s needed,
including in the populated areas, meaning solar technologies can be
installed domestically, such as solar panels on the roofs of houses,
according to Ochs.
Solar technologies could provide off-grid
communities with access to power as well as promoting clean energy in
the country. However, solar technologies can be expensive, lack the
reliability of stand-alone generators and often need constant
maintenance.
The situation is exacerbated by the presence of
imitation solar products on the market, which often break easily,
thereby diminishing consumer trust in the technology.
Cambodia’s
potential for renewable energies exceeds many countries in the developed
world, analysts say, and Cambodia is in a good position to create
favorable economies of scale for renewable energies.
“I wouldn’t
argue for building a national grid, giant coal plants and importing
coal, or developing only large hydro, as recent actions seem to suggest.
Let’s work with the system as it is today, and develop distributed
renewable solutions on the ground,” said Ochs.
Inter Press Service
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