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The Chinese Threat to Lower Brahmaputra Riparians India and Bangladesh

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The Chinese Threat to Lower Brahmaputra Riparians India and Bangladesh​

The plan to divert the waters of Brahmaputra would affect over 140 million people who are dependent on the river.
By Jaideep Saikia
February 19, 2022

https://thediplomat.com/2022/02/the...r-brahmaputra-riparians-india-and-bangladesh/

The Chinese Threat to Lower Brahmaputra Riparians India and Bangladesh

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Water — one of the most vital natural resources on the planet — is taking center stage in India’s Northeast and is gradually becoming a weapon of geopolitics. A mass movement engineered by the Assam-based Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti (KMSS) has demanded a stop to all mega dam projects in the country’s sensitive Northeast. While some of their apprehensions are legitimate, the fact is that the rich blue resource of the expanse — awashed as it is with the white waters of the Tibetan plateau — would not only be a power reservoir for the region, but also for the rest of India. The protest that began in Assam, led by the KMSS, against the construction of mega dams is leading to a novel conflict between development and demography.

The problem came into the spotlight with concerns about China undertaking a huge project to construct five dams in Shannan Prefecture in the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR). The precise locations of the project are reportedly in Gyatsa, Jieuxu, Langzhen, Zangmu, and Zhongda in the TAR. The dams are slated to divert the waters of the Brahmaputra River (Yarlung-Tsangpo in Tibet) to China’s water-scare northwestern and northern provinces.

The damming of the Brahmaputra started on November 12, 2010, which marked the formal beginning of the 7.9 billion RMB Zangmu Hydropower Station. The 3,260-meter Zangmu project, with a capacity of 510 MW, became fully operational on October 13, 2015. Earlier, in January 2013, China had approved three more dams on the river as part of its 12th Five Year Plan. The Dagu (640 MW) and Jiexu (560 MW) dams were to be constructed upstream of Zangmu and the Jiacha Dam (320 MW) downstream. On March 11, 2021, China adopted its 14th Five-Year Plan, which included a blueprint amounting to billions of dollars worth of projects, including controversial hydropower projects on the Brahmaputra in the TAR.

China is embarking upon ambitious “dam-constructing exercises” on all its important rivers. The familiar Three Gorges Project across the Yangtze River is one such project.

The urgency of undertaking such projects comes from the need to correct the uneven distribution of water in the country, which originated with Mao Zedong’s plan in 1950s to transfer water from the south to the north. China’s South-North Water Transfer Project is a decades-old enterprise, implemented in order to maximize the water resources available in the country. Whereas the primary thrust is geared toward the diversion of waters from the Yangtze River to the Hai and the Yellow Rivers, the sketch to divert the waters of the Brahmaputra River’s upper waters in Tibet, is a cause a alarm for not only India, but environmentalist all over the globe.

The plan to divert the waters of Brahmaputra would affect over 140 million people who are dependent on the river. Indeed, it would be India and Bangladesh that would have to bear the brunt of the planned damming and diversion. There is great apprehension that the diversion of the waters would affect the downstream flow in Northeast India and beyond. China has denied this, stating that it would not reduce downstream water flow.

Li Chaoyi, the chief engineer of China Huaneng Group, which was the prime contractor of the dam project, said that the river’s flow would not be affected by the construction of the dam. Quoted in the official Chinese news agency, Xinhua, Li stated, “After it becomes operational, the river water will flow downstream through water turbines and sluices. So the water volume downstream will not be cut.” He also stated that environmental protection would be a priority.

Nevertheless, the issue of the dam remains a cause of great concern for India and was taken up in the 2010 India-China strategic dialogue that took place between the then-Indian foreign secretary, Nirupama Rao, and the then-Chinese vice-foreign minister, Zhang Zhijun, in Beijing. Rao stated that she took up the issue of the dam, and was reportedly reassured by Zhang that “it was not a project designed to divert the water and affect the welfare and availability of water to the countries in the lower reaches.” But, notwithstanding such assurances, the fact of the matter is that there remains widespread concern about the “diversion.”

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Furthermore, it is to be noted that Beijing has embarked on an inequitable “development” project in Tibet. Tibet’s towering altitude, craggy terrain, and hostile climate are geared toward the sustenance of livestock farming and traditional agriculture, activities that have kept the high landscape of the “Roof of the World” more or less unharmed. But Beijing’s policy of fast-track development driven by an industrial model that is not in consonance with the Tibetan topography is destroying the delicate ecosystem of the Tibetan plateau. It is also threatening to brutally alter the natural hydrological regime of Tibet.

Experts are also of the opinion that increased urbanization and infrastructural development, by way of construction like the Qinghai-Tibet Railway, could add to the adverse effects of global warming. Such moves would have a direct impact on the rivers that snake into Arunachal Pradesh and the crucial glacial mass, which is fast receding. Such developments suggest that the waters that feed the riparian states could eventually run dry and sound the death knell for both India and Bangladesh.

Wary of the downstream impact of the dam that is being constructed by China in the Tibet Autonomous Region, the Assam government decided to move past New Delhi and take up the issue with China. In the meantime, in the face of both the Chinese dam project and another project in the region, the Lower Subansiri Hydro-Electric Project by the National Hydroelectric Power Corporation in Gerukamukh, several political factions including the BJP demanded a halt to the project, stating that the construction of the dam would pose grave danger to the people of Assam’s Dhemaji, Lakhimpur and Jorhat. The parties pointed to the high seismic potential that threatens the region, and has asked for a mutually acceptable water agreement between India and China.

The government of India instituted an Inter-Ministerial Group in order to study the sub-basin environment impact in the Brahmaputra. New Delhi also clarified that the majority of the hydroelectrical projects that are being taken up in Arunachal Pradesh are to be implemented as run-of-river schemes and would have very limited roles in triggering floods in downstream areas. But a feasibility study of the schemes that are being planned must be taken up for the Lohit basin by the Ministry of Environment, Forest, and Climate Change. Only with a thorough understanding of the social and environmental consequences in mind can water resources be correctly harnessed for equitable development.

GUEST AUTHOR​

Jaideep Saikia​

Jaideep Saikia is a conflict analyst and author of several books on security and strategy. He is also fellow at the Irregular Warfare Initiative, West Point.
 
The plan to divert the waters of Brahmaputra would affect over 140 million people who are dependent on the river.
By Jaideep Saikia
Not only Jaideep Saikia but many others also predict that dams built by China in the Chinese land north of Arunachal would harm the agriculture of Bangladesh.

However, no one ever said why this would harm BD agriculture? For one, I believe that if China constructs dams to produce electricity, it will rather benefit Assam and BD.

China will withhold water in the Monsoon when there is ample water on the other side of the Himalayas. This will cause fewer floods in BD.

On the other hand, in order to produce power in the dry season, China has to release water to move turbines. This released water will come down to Assam and flow through Bangladesh and its river system will be charged with more water than it receives now in the winter.

Anyway, this is what I think. I ask others to come out with their ideas based on logic and engineering knowledge on open channel hydraulics.

BD is in trouble if it is rather India that withholds a part of water running down through the Chinese dams in the winter.

When an Indian cries for Bangladesh, there are reasons that we do not have to trust him. The writer of this article is an Indian, and he did not cite the reasons why BD would suffer.
 
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Not only Jaideep Saikia but many others also predicted that dams built by China in the Chinese land above Arunachal would harm the agriculture of Bangladesh.

However, no one ever said why this would harm BD agriculture? For one, I believe the dams to be built by China will rather benefit BD. If China constructs dams to produce electricity, it will rather benefit Assam and BD.

China will withhold water in the Monsoon when there is ample water on the other side of the Himalayas. This will cause fewer floods in BD.

On the other hand, in order to produce power in the dry season, China has to release water to move turbines. This water will come down to Assam and flow towards Bangladesh and its river system will be charged with more water than it receives now in the winter.

Anyway, this is what I think. I ask others to come out with their ideas based on logic and engineering knowledge on open channel hydraulics.

BD is in trouble if India withholds a part of water running down through the Chinese dams. When an Indian cries for Bangladesh, there are reasons that we do not have to trust him. The writer of this article is an Indian, and he did not cite the reasons why BD would suffer.

@bluesky bhai, this guy Jaideep Saikia is an Assamese BJP functionary. Saikia is an Assamese name.

All of a sudden they develop a concern and worry for Bangladesh. :lol:

This concern was nowhere to be seen when they were withdrawing water unilaterally for the last fifty years and turned the Brahmaputra downstream in Bangladesh to a desert.

Bunch of fakes.
 
@bluesky bhai, this guy Jaideep Saikia is an Assamese BJP functionary. Saikia is an Assamese name.

All of a sudden they develop a concern and worry for Bangladesh. :lol:

This concern was nowhere to be seen when they were withdrawing water unilaterally for the last fifty years and turned the Brahmaputra downstream in Bangladesh to a desert.

Bunch of fakes.
Indians remain as crocodiles as they have been for the last thousand years. They love to shed crocodile tears for Bangladesh.
মায়ের পোড়েনা, মাসির পোড়ে।

One other example is asking BD to get Indian help to dredge the Meghna. একে বলা হয় , খাল কেটে কুমির আনা।
 
Not only Jaideep Saikia but many others also predict that dams built by China in the Chinese land north of Arunachal would harm the agriculture of Bangladesh.

However, no one ever said why this would harm BD agriculture? For one, I believe that if China constructs dams to produce electricity, it will rather benefit Assam and BD.

China will withhold water in the Monsoon when there is ample water on the other side of the Himalayas. This will cause fewer floods in BD.

On the other hand, in order to produce power in the dry season, China has to release water to move turbines. This released water will come down to Assam and flow through Bangladesh and its river system will be charged with more water than it receives now in the winter.

Anyway, this is what I think. I ask others to come out with their ideas based on logic and engineering knowledge on open channel hydraulics.

BD is in trouble if it is rather India that withholds a part of water running down through the Chinese dams in the winter.

When an Indian cries for Bangladesh, there are reasons that we do not have to trust him. The writer of this article is an Indian, and he did not cite the reasons why BD would suffer.
Quite right.

Not only is he an Indian, he is that most dangerous of all Indians as far as Bangladeshis are concerned. He is an Assamese.
 
The writer shouldn't put Bangladesh and India in the same bracket.

Bangladesh is already a victim of Indian water terrorism!

So yes if China block Indian water , I will be happy. India will understand the pain of a victim.

China please block the water of India and make them desert, as they are planning to make Bangladesh a desert!
 
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If China diverted water from Tibet to Xinjiang, it would indeed destroy agriculture in India and Bangladesh.

However, China has only built a few dams and did not divert the water away. The amount of water India and Bangladesh get from China has not decreased, and will become more stable.

That is good for agriculture in India and Bangladesh, not harm.
 
India has been cooperating with the West's anti-China hostile propaganda. After building the dam, did the water disappear? Water must pass through a water turbine to generate electricity
Yes, this is what I said in my earlier post. China is to build a great reservoir where rainwater and melted Himalayan water is preserved while a part of this water will go through the turbines to produce electricity.

And this water runs to Bangladesh but in reduced quantity in the flood season causing lesser flooding in BD. Note that much of the rainy season water is preserved in the artificial lakes north of the Himalayas.

On the other hand, China is to produce power also in the winter. So, the water contained in the reservoir is passed through the turbines. This is how more water is available for agriculture in Bangladesh in winter.
 
Quite right.

Not only is he an Indian, he is that most dangerous of all Indians as far as Bangladeshis are concerned. He is an Assamese.

@Joe Shearer Dada - not only are some Assamese a threat for Bangladeshis, they are a threat for folks from West Bengal living in Assam as well, either Hindu or Muslim. Jati-biddeshi type and very communal, some of them.

I can't figure out whether this is because of ignorance, short-sightedness or both. It is indeed sad.

I remember, they had a "Bangali Bhaga" movement historically, and also recently, they had opposed the NRC measure (in spite of being BJP supporters) because they did not want Bengali Hindu refugees from Bangladesh to settle in Assam. I don't know - this is my take as I understand it , I could be off base.

If their fear is that majority Bengalis will take away their Assamese culture, it is totally unfounded.

But ultimately, the area cannot develop industrially or intellectually if talented non-Assamese are driven away.

I am glad Bangladesh is open to all as far as talent is concerned. This is very practical. People have families to feed, regardless of nationality, creed, religion, or race. If they pay local taxes, are needed by local industry and have legal work status, I don't see why anyone would not be allowed to work in Bangladesh. Pay rates are higher in Bangladesh than India in most cases anyway.

I will re-iterate again my appeal to the Bangladesh govt. to grant you and other sroddheyo dadas from Kolkata distinguished honorary citizenship in Bangladesh. :-)
 
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@Joe Shearer Dada - not only are some Assamese a threat for Bangladeshis, they are a threat for folks from West Bengal living in Assam as well, either Hindu or Muslim. Jati-biddeshi type and very communal, some of them.

I can't figure out whether this is because of ignorance, short-sightedness or both. It is indeed sad.

I remember, they had a "Bangali Bhaga" movement historically, and also recently, they had opposed the NRC measure (in spite of being BJP supporters) because they did not want Bengali Hindu refugees from Bangladesh to settle in Assam. I don't know - this is my take as I understand it , I could be off base.

If their fear is that majority Bengalis will take away their Assamese culture, it is totally unfounded.

But ultimately, the area cannot develop industrially or intellectually if talented non-Assamese are driven away.
Bhai amar,

You are right, what is going on is a poisonous ethno-nationalism, and it hates not only supposedly Bangladeshi Muslims, but Bengalis of every description. You will remember the unrest of the mid-50s, when West Bengal Hindus were fair game, and were driven out.

There was a friend on this forum named @meghdut but he has decided to take a break from social media, and we cannot draw him into this discussion.

I am glad Bangladesh is open to all as far as talent is concerned. This is very practical. People have families to feed, regardless of nationality, creed, religion, or race. If they pay local taxes, are needed by local industry and have legal work status, I don't see why anyone would not be allowed to work in Bangladesh. Pay rates are higher in Bangladesh than India in most cases anyway.

I will re-iterate again my appeal to the Bangladesh govt. to grant you and other sroddheyo dadas from Kolkata distinguished honorary citizenship in Bangladesh. :-)
Ever since my cousin, who seems to spend at least one-third of his time in 'desh, told me that I am entitled to outright Bangali citizenship due to my descent, I have been tempted to apply for citizenship and make a permanent move.

Certainly, India under the present regime has become increasingly removed from any sane person's thoughts.

Who knows? Perhaps I might spend the rest of my few remaining days in a simple house in Kulokathi. Dhaka is too expensive for me.
 
Bhai amar,

You are right, what is going on is a poisonous ethno-nationalism, and it hates not only supposedly Bangladeshi Muslims, but Bengalis of every description. You will remember the unrest of the mid-50s, when West Bengal Hindus were fair game, and were driven out.

There was a friend on this forum named @meghdut but he has decided to take a break from social media, and we cannot draw him into this discussion.


Ever since my cousin, who seems to spend at least one-third of his time in 'desh, told me that I am entitled to outright Bangali citizenship due to my descent, I have been tempted to apply for citizenship and make a permanent move.

Certainly, India under the present regime has become increasingly removed from any sane person's thoughts.

Who knows? Perhaps I might spend the rest of my few remaining days in a simple house in Kulokathi. Dhaka is too expensive for me.

I'd suggest Chittagong rather than out in the sticks where it may be cheap but has other problems.

Chittagong is a rather laid back metropolis and nestled among low level hillocks. The air is a lot cleaner than Dhaka and traffic is nowhere as bad as Dhaka.

But you can ask business associates or colleagues and decide yourself.
 
Who knows? Perhaps I might spend the rest of my few remaining days in a simple house in Kulokathi. Dhaka is too expensive for me.
Kulokathi seems to be your paternal land. But, there are anti-Hindu feelings under the surface everywhere. When the land grabbers see you back, they may hatch a conspiracy against you.

Perhaps, you know that there are laws in BD that the descendants of those who left BD can claim their legal lands back.

Communal harmony is more maintained when BAL is in power. By the way, you will not get the correct people in your old town in BD with whom you can be cordial. It will be another foreign land.

Chittagong area may be a better place as @Bilal9 said. There are many works there also. There are companies that may employ you if you do not establish your own company.

Anyway, life is not that enjoyful after a certain age wherever you go, especially when you are accustomed to Kolkata life. But, as far as I know, many of the Hindu descendants are coming back to BD.
 
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