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Strategies & Market Trends : China Warehouse- More Than Crockery -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RealMuLan who wrote (2750)3/10/2004 4:36:59 PM
From: RealMuLan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6370
 
Project to build 13 dams threatens China's 'Grand Canyon'
Jim Yardley NYT
, March 10, 2004

DIMALUO, China The highest villages in the mountains above the Nu River seem to hang in the air. Farmers grow cabbage and corn nearly a half kilometer up, as if cultivating ski slopes. Necessity has pushed them into the sky; land is precious along the river.

They may have to move higher still, perhaps into the clouds.

The Nu, which flows through a region that is home to old-growth forests, some 7,000 species of plants and 80 rare or endangered animal species, is the latest waterway coveted by a Chinese government that is planning to build a new generation of dams to help power its relentless, booming economy.

Unlike the Three Gorges Dam, the world's largest hydroelectric project and the subject of a bitter international debate, the Nu River plan has barely stirred a ripple outside China. But in China, the project, which calls for 13 dams in all, has unexpectedly touched a nascent chord of environmental awareness and provoked rare public rifts within the government.

The reason is that the Nu is one of the last pristine rivers in one of the world's most polluted countries, running through a canyon region unlike any other, which a UN agency has designated a World Heritage site. Last year, China's State Environmental Protection Agency and the Chinese Academy of Sciences publicly criticized the Nu project.

"If this river system is destroyed, it would be a terrible blow," said Li Bosheng, a prominent Chinese botanist. "This area has been called the Grand Canyon of the Orient. It forms one of the world's most special canyon environments."

For China, which already has more large dams than any other country, environmental awareness has been slowly growing since the long fight over the Three Gorges, where ground was broken a decade ago for a project that will cost at least $25 billion and displace more than a million people by the time it is finished in 2009.

No estimate has been made public for the cost of the Nu project. In Yunnan Province in southwest China, the Nu project would force the relocation of as many as 50,000 people, many descended from Lisu, Nu, Drung, Tibetan and other ethnic hill people. Many are farmers and herders who cannot speak Chinese and who choose to live on the land as their ancestors did.

"If people are forced to move around because of the projects, they are going to lose the way of life that makes them special," said one villager, Alou, an ethnic Tibetan. "It's inevitable that people will lose their traditions if they move away."

From its beginnings in the Tibetan high plateau, the Nu runs through one of China's most remote areas as it carves canyons through the rugged mountain ranges east of the Himalayas. It drops like a roller coaster, a descent of nearly a kilometer and a half, or about a mile, plunging through gorges as the powerful current scrapes boulders white, as if with a steel brush.

Nor is it alone. It is in the family of rivers flowing out of the Tibetan Plateau that become some of the most celebrated and important waterways in Asia: the Dulong, which becomes the Irrawaddy in Myanmar, formerly Burma; the Jinsha, which becomes the Yangtze; the Lancang, which turns into the Mekong in Southeast Asia; and the Nu, which becomes the Salween as it flows into Myanmar and along the border with Thailand.

China is moving to tighten its grip on many of these rivers. It has already drawn downstream protests for dam projects on the upper reaches of the Mekong. Plans are also under way to build several major new dams on the Jinsha nicknamed the "Double Three Gorges" because, combined, they would generate twice as much power as the earlier project.

Opponents of the Nu project say their best chance may be to influence the project rather than to stop it. The political momentum to develop such projects in China is simply too powerful, particularly because China is facing a growing energy shortage.

The country is outstripping its power supply and suffering isolated blackouts and power shortages. It is also under heavy international pressure to shift from dirtier coal to cleaner energy sources.

But to critics, the government's answer to its energy problems - developing the vast natural resources in China's west to power the economic boom in the east - smacks of naked exploitation. Chinese environmentalists warn that China will have nowhere left unspoiled for future generations.

In winter, the Nu changes from blue to jade to milky green, turning yellowish brown only after the river rises with the spring melt. The river's humid upper reaches pass through the Gaoligong Shan National Park, considered one of the least disturbed temperate ecosystems in the world, where the cliffs are thick with ferns and leafy stalks of bamboo that rise like green, plumed fingers.

The area that was designated a World Heritage site, located in this region, is named the Three Parallel Rivers because the Jinsha, Lancang and Nu run beside one another, in some stretches carving gorges nearly three kilometers deep. At least a fourth of China's indigenous plants and half its native animals can be found there, including the snow leopard.

"It is one of the most biodiverse regions in the world," said Edward Norton of the Nature Conservancy, which is acting as a consultant to the Chinese government in developing the Gaoligong Shan as a national nature preserve.

The dam proposal became public last August after reports appeared in the Chinese media, including in China Environment News, the official newspaper of the state environmental agency. It ran several front-page articles, including one titled, "The Pristine Environment of the Nu River Should Be Preserved."

Experts who attended private government-sponsored meetings on the project said the fact that critics were allowed to voice concerns represented a significant change for China. Still, they expect the project to be approved in some form and are pushing for an independent environmental review and other safeguards.

Wu Fan, a deputy director general of the Yunnan Development Planning Commission, said that officials were committed to environmental protection. He said that relocating the villagers would end slash-and-burn farming, and also noted that hydropower is a "clean" power source that would generate the annual equivalent of 37 million tons of coal.

"We should not go to extremes in terms of either environmental protection or development," Wu said.

Up in the mountains, the village of Dimaluo may already be glimpsing the future. A few months ago, workers began building a dam on a tributary that flows from a glacier. The dam, separate from the Nu project, came with little warning, and officials have not explained what will happen to the 20 families that must move to higher ground.

Alou, the villager who has been critical of the dams, said officials had promised that the dams would create jobs and provide more electricity, but he is skeptical. "As far as I can see, no jobs will go to the locals," said Alou, who like many Tibetans uses only one name. "The reason is local education hasn't kept up with the modern world."

The 2,400 villagers in Dimaluo are divided among Lisu, Nu and Tibetans, many of whom live in wooden shacks where dirt pits are built on the wood floors so that a fire can be lit for cooking and heat. "We're used to life here, so we don't find it very difficult," said one woman, Ba Wenhua. "The river gives us water to drink, and the mountain gives us food to eat."

The New York Times
iht.com