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China’s Hydro-Hegemony

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China’s Hydro-Hegemony
By BRAHMA CHELLANEY
Published: February 7, 2013

New Delhi

ASIA is the world’s most water-stressed continent, a situation compounded by China’s hydro-supremacy in the region. Beijing’s recent decision to build a slew of giant new dams on rivers flowing to other countries is thus set to roil riparian relations.

China — which already boasts more large dams than the rest of the world put together and has unveiled a mammoth $635-billion fresh investment in water infrastructure over the next decade — has emerged as the key obstacle to building institutionalized collaboration on shared water resources in Asia.

In contrast to the bilateral water treaties between many of its neighbors, China rejects the concept of a water-sharing arrangement or joint, rules-based management of common resources.

For example, in rejecting the 1997 United Nations convention that lays down rules on shared water resources, Beijing asserted its claim that an upstream power has the right to assert absolute territorial sovereignty over the waters on its side of the international boundary — or the right to divert as much water as it wishes for its needs, irrespective of the effects on a downriver state.

Today, by building megadams and reservoirs in its borderlands, China is working to re-engineer the flows of major rivers that are the lifeline of lower riparian states.

China is the source of transboundary riverflows to the largest number of countries in the world — from Russia, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan to the states in the Indochina peninsula and Southern Asia. This pre-eminence resulted from its absorption of the ethnic-minority homelands that now make up 60 percent of its landmass and are the origin of all the international rivers flowing out of Chinese-held territory. No other country in the world comes close to the hydro-hegemony that China has established.

Since the last decade, China’s dam building has been moving from dam-saturated internal rivers to international rivers. Most of the new megaprojects designated recently by China’s state council as priority ventures are concentrated in the country’s seismically active southwest, which is largely populated by ethnic minorities. Such dam building is triggering new ethnic tensions over displacement and submergence.

The state council approved an array of new dams on the Salween, Brahmaputra and Mekong rivers, which originate on the Tibetan plateau and flow to South Asia and Southeast Asia. The unveiling of projects on the Brahmaputra evoked Indian diplomatic concern at a time when water has emerged as a new Chinese-Indian divide, while the Salween projects end the suspension of dam building on that river announced eight years ago.

The Salween — known in Chinese as Nu Jiang, or the “Angry River” — is Asia’s last largely free-flowing river, running through deep, spectacular gorges and glaciated peaks on its way to Burma and Thailand. Its upstream basin is inhabited by at lease a dozen different ethnic groups and rated as one of the world’s most biologically diverse regions, home to more than 5,000 plant species and nearly half of China’s animal species. No sooner had this stunning region, known as the Three Parallel Rivers, been added to the World Heritage List by Unesco in 2003 than Beijing unveiled plans for a cascade of dams near the area.

The international furor that followed led Prime Minister Wen Jiabao to suspend work. The reversal of that suspension, significantly, comes before Wen and President Hu Jintao step down as part of the country’s power transition.

The third international river cited by the state council in its new project approvals has already been a major target of Chinese dam building. Chinese engineers have constructed six megadams on the Mekong, including the 4,200-megawatt Xiaowan, and a greater water appropriator, the 5,850-megawatt Nuozhadu, whose first generator began producing electricity last September.

Asia needs institutionalized water cooperation because it awaits a future made hotter and drier by climate and environmental change and resource depletion. The continent’s water challenges have been exacerbated by growing consumption, unsustainable irrigation practices, rapid industrialization, pollution and geopolitical shifts.

Asia has morphed into the most likely flash point for water wars. Several countries are currently engaged in dam building on transnational rivers. The majority of these dams are being financed and built by Chinese state entities. Most Chinese-aided dam projects in Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar are designed to pump electricity into China’s southern electricity grid, with the lower riparians bearing the environmental and social costs.

But it is China’s dam-building spree at home — reflected in the fact that it boasts half of the 50,000 large dams in the world — that carries the greatest international implications and obstructs the development of an Asian rules-based order.

China has made the control and manipulation of natural-river flows a fulcrum of its power and economic development. Although promoting multilateralism on the world stage, it has given the cold shoulder to multilateral cooperation among basin nations — as symbolized, for example, by the Mekong River Commission — and rebuffed efforts by states sharing its rivers to seek bilateral water-sharing arrangements.

Beijing already has significant financial, trade and political leverage over most of its neighbors. Now, by building an asymmetric control over cross-border flows, it is seeking to have its hand on Asia’s water tap.

Given China’s unique riparian position and role, it will not be possible to transform the Asian water competition into cooperation without Beijing playing a leadership role to develop a rules-based system.

Brahma Chellaney is the author of “Water: Asia’s New Battleground” and of the forthcoming book “Water, Peace, and War: Confronting the Global Water Crisis.”
A version of this op-ed appeared in print on February 8, 2013, in The International Herald Tribune.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/08/opinion/global/chinas-hydro-hegemony.html?_r=0

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China has to agree to a water sharing treaty. This will lead to a total allout war. Wtf do these idiots think of themselves.
 
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Why all this hullabaloo? Water flow into India and other countries is not going to get affected as these dams are basically for power generation and not irrigation. There would be no diversion of the Brahmaputra waters for agriculture.

Making a mountain out of a molehill as always! Even if China sneezes our great 'analysts' go to town shouting murder! Jeeez! :fie:
 
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Why all this hullabaloo? Water flow into India and other countries is not going to get affected as these dams are basically for power generation and not irrigation. There would be no diversion of the Brahmaputra waters for agriculture.

Making a mountain out of a molehill as always! Even if China sneezes our great 'analysts' go to town shouting murder! Jeeez! :fie:

Your country is obsessed with us.
Every time you hear the word 'China' you are trained by your media propaganda to hate China.
Learn to respect other people.
If you do, we will respect you back.
 
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the reason China is building dams like crazy in Tibet is to have a tight grip on Asia’s water tap,probably China will never use it as a weapon,but it serves as a fightening deterrent.
 
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China has to agree to a water sharing treaty.

China does not have a water sharing treaty with any country in fact the water China gets from Kazakistan into Xinjiang is paid for, China also voted against a water resolution at the UN once.

This will lead to a total allout war.

Exaggerated comment to say.


Wtf do idiots think of themselves.

Building dams for power ? In fact more dams ones even the size of the three gorges or bigger will be built.

the reason China is building dams like crazy in Tibet is to have a tight grip on Asia’s water tap,probably China will never use it as a weapon,but it serves as a fightening deterrent.

I have similar thoughts on this.
 
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China does not have a water sharing treaty with any country in fact the water China gets from Kazakistan into Xinjiang is paid for, China also voted against a water resolution at the UN once.

I think it is Kyrgyzstan,they cut our water supply and Tarim river disappeared in the middle of the desert,no country is generous when it comes to water.

China shares the Tarim with Kyrgyzstan, as well as others that have their sources in Kyrgyzstan and
flow into China
 
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I think it is Kyrgyzstan,they cut our water supply and Tarim river disappeared in the middle of the desert,no country is generous when it comes to water.

I believe it is Kazakhstan not Kyrgyzstan although I have heard of some water talks with them, there have been some reports of water found underground in Tibet. As Tibet is where many of the rivers originate from, water will be what oil is to in the future.

China has water to sustain to for some time and talks with Russia of bringing water from Lake Baikal if needed.


China shares the Tarim with Kyrgyzstan, as well as others that have their sources in Kyrgyzstan and
flow into China


So both Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.
 
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China has a strangle hold over Kazakhstan over water


CHINA
China is an increasingly important actor in the governance of Central Asian waters. The Chinese
authorities have begun a massive state-sponsored population migration into its western Xinjiang
territory, and claim the region may bulge with as many as 40 million new inhabitants.

Agricultural
development in the province is a priority: cotton occupies close to half of Xinjiang's arable land and
Beijing considers the massive exportation of textiles to be of vital strategic interest.

China is already using some of the Irtysh waters to provide water to the Karamay oil fields.
Further development in the province is to be facilitated through diversion schemes for the Irtysh and
the Ili. This includes constructing a canal (22m wide and 300km long) to divert water from the Irtysh
to Lake Ulungur in Xinjiang. In October 2004, the Chinese ambassador to Kazakhstan, Pei Shouxiao,
affi rmed that his country was counting on using as much as 40% of the Irtysh's effluence.

These plans would endanger access to water for inhabitants of northern Kazakhstan and
Kazakhstan's development projects in this part of the territory, in particular its new capital city of
Astana. It would also affect industry in the area, which is highly dependent upon these rivers, and
navigation on the Irtysh, which is an important transport axis with the Russian Federation. Lastly, the
project could have a serious environmental impact.

China's use of water from the Ili River is already having significant consequences on Lake
Balkhash, one of the 20 largest lakes in the world. Many specialists argue that Lake Balkhash is in
serious danger of following the sad fate of the Aral Sea. Mels Eleusizov, the head of Kazakhstan's
"Tagibat" environmental movement and a former presidential candidate, has said that the lake "is
in a very vulnerable position, receiving 80 percent of its water from the Ili".

In 2001, China and
Kazakhstan signed an agreement to facilitate cooperation on transboundary water management
including the Ili, but despite annual meetings no specifi c yearly water allocation has been agreed
on. China and Kazakhstan held talks on the problem quite recently, but China spurned Kazakhstan's
proposal to send China large stocks of free or heavily subsidized food for 10 years in exchange for a
commitment from China to allow an unimpeded flow of river water into the lake.

http://www.unidir.org/pdf/articles/pdf-art2687.pdf
 
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If oil is black gold, then water is blue gold.
You can switch to other forms of energy if you run out of oil, but what do you do when you run out of water?
 
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Arunachal, Assam to move New Delhi over China dams
TNN | Feb 10, 2013, 06.44 AM IST

ITANAGAR: Arunachal Pradesh and Assam will move New Delhi to draw the attention of Beijing with regard to the three dams proposed by China on Tsangpo, known as Siang in Arunachal and Brahmaputra in Assam. The states will urge the Centre to hold talks with China on the steps to be taken to neutralise the impact of the dams on the Siang in Arunachal and the Brahmaputra in Assam.

Arunachal Pradesh water resources development minister Newlai Tingkhatra and his Assam counterpart Rajib Lochan Pegu convened a meeting here on Saturday to discuss the chronic flood problem and measures to tackle it. The meeting was also attended by Assam parliamentary secretary (revenue) Pradhan Baruah.

"We have no objection to China building dams. But the lives of the people, which are sustained by the flow of the Brahmaputra for ages, should not be affected by the dams. If the downstream flow of the river is not affected, we have no objection," the ministers told reporters here.

Pegu said Assam chief minister Tarun Gogoi has drawn the attention of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in writing. Tingkhatra, however, said he would urge chief minister Nabam Tuki to follow suit.

Responding to queries, Tingkhatra said states have been formed for administrative reasons, but nature has no boundary, thus, Assam suffers heavily due to landslides, erosion and siltation in Arunachal rivers.

On the question of India losing its first user rights if China builds three dams first, both the Assam leaders said the life of people of the two states cannot sustain without the river. Pegu, however, said he is not opposed to any dam if the downstream impact is assessed scientifically and precautionary measures initiated for building the dam in the region. In fact, the civil society feels that representatives of NE states should be sent by the Centre to study the proposed dams in China and their impact.
 
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Drying up of Siang River, 'lifeline of Northeast', could spell doom
ANI
Itanagar, Mar 1 (ANI): The mighty Siang River has dried up, shrinking about a kilometre from its bank in the century-old Arunachal Pradesh town of Pasighat in East Siang district, a phenomenon never experienced in the last half-decade.

The people cannot forget the June 9, 2000 catastrophe when the River Siang rose suddenly by 30 metres as they were asleep, inundating almost the entire town and causing widespread destruction of property, besides claiming seven lives.

Waters of the river rose after the collapse of a hydropower dam in Tibet. There were also fears that China might have diverted the waters of the Yarlong Tsangpo.

Siang is also known as Yarlong Tsangpo in Tibet, and there were fears that there could be some artificial blockade from the Chinese side that had caused the unprecedented drying up of the River Siang, regarded as the lifeline of India's north eastern region.

Arunachal Government spokesman Tako Dabii, who himself inspected the dried up bed of the river, also expressed the apprehension of locals, and suggested that the Indian Government, its agencies like the Central Water Commission, should immediately conduct an in-depth study in collaboration with the state government, to find the crux of the problem.

Dabii said the panic prevailing among the people was similar to the 'Kakua bhaya' phenomenon (an unknown fear during the Dwapara Yug), and therefore, could simply not be brushed aside. He pleaded with all those who matter at all levels to take immediate precautionary measures.

Quoting many septuagenarians, Dabii said they felt that if it was a blockade, it would be much more disastrous, and would set alarm bells ringing, particularly in New Delhi and Itanagar, besides all those associated with disaster management.

Taking a dig at China for its baseless rhetorical claim over Arunachal territory, Dabii said such claims make the great Asian giant a 'laughing stock' before the global community.

Communist leaders are sensible and would realise their folly soon to stop ridiculing them, he added.

Notwithstanding China's claims, its dam-construction binge fuelled by its growing energy needs, nothing could be ruled out.

Yarlung Tsangpo or Yarlung River, the highest river in the world, is a watercourse that originates at the Tamlung Tso Lake in western Tibet, southeast of Mount Kailash and Lake Manasarovar.

It later forms the South Tibet Valley and Yarlung Tsangpo Grand Canyon, before entering India at Tuting, in Arunachal as Siang, takes the name of Brahmaputra in Assam and enters Bangladesh and is christened Padma after the Meghna joins its at Bhairav Bazar.

In the Upper Mekong Basin in Yunnan Province, China plans to construct eight cascade hydropower dams, the first of which, the Manwan Dam, was completed in 1996. (ANI)

upper-subansiri-river-map.gif
 
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China has to agree to a water sharing treaty. This will lead to a total allout war. Wtf do these idiots think of themselves.
Then you taste our nuclear hegemony!

You have water from the Indian Ocean, learn to use it.
 
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Indians don't need a lot of water anyway... bathing can be done in the Ganges....flushing is a nuissance not to be bothered with.
 
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