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China's
dam-building will cause more problems than it solves
Under
pressure to cut emissions,
China
risks irreversibly destroying its great rivers and biodiversity hotspots

Floodwaters at the Xiaolandi dam during a flood-discharge and
sand-washing operation of the Yellow River in Jiyuan. Photograph: Miao Qiunao/AP/Press
Association Images
Let’s see the last I
knew China was full
of guys in black pajamas who worked in rice paddies and drove around on
3 speed bicycles. For fun they walked around with little red books and
said nice things about a guy named Mao. He was the father of the 7’
basketball player, Yao.
“Then they got capitalism and started to pollute the air and that
is why gas is high and everything is made out of plastic in their
factories”- the unknown kayaker
In 2007,
China became the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gases. Since
then, not only the EU and the US,
but also developing nations such as the alliance of small island states
have put the government in
Beijing
under pressure to adopt binding emission cuts.
At the 2009 climate
summit in Copenhagen,
China announced that it would reduce its carbon intensity – the
amount of greenhouse gas emissions per unit of economic output – by at
least 40% by 2020. Achieving this ambitious goal has become an
overriding political priority for the Chinese government. The draft of
its new five-year plan, which will be discussed by the National People's
Congress in March, includes
an environmental tax and other carbon-cutting measures.
The five-year plan also
includes the most relentless dam-building effort that any nation has
ever undertaken in history. If approved, this program would cut off the
country's nose to spite her face. It would irreversibly destroy
China's great rivers and biodiversity hotspots of global importance.
China
already counts more dams within its borders than any other country. It
has paid a huge price for this development. Chinese dams have displaced
an estimated 23 million people. Dam breaks in the country with the
world's worst safety record have killed approximately 300,000 people.
Scientific evidence suggests that one particular project, the Zipingpu
Dam, may have triggered the devastating earthquake in Sichuan of 2008. Dams have also taken a huge
toll on China's
biodiversity, causing fisheries to suffer and
driving charismatic species such as the Yangtze River Dolphin to
extinction.
As part of its
low-carbon diet, the Chinese government plans to approve new hydropower
plants with a capacity of 140 gigawatts over the next five years. For
comparison, Brazil, the United
States and Canada have each built between 75
and 85 gigawatts of hydropower capacity in their entire history.
Achieving the new plan's target would require building cascades of dams
on several rivers in China's
south-west and on the Tibetan plateau – regions which are populated by
ethnic minorities, ecologically fragile, rich in biodiversity, and
seismically active.
As a harbinger of the
new trend, the Chinese government
recently announced that i would allow a dam cascade on the Ju River or
Salween – a pristine river at the heart of a World Heritage Site –
to be built. China's premier,
Wen Jiabao,
had stopped theses projects in 2004 as a major concession to
environmentalists. The government also agreed to shrink the most
important fisheries reserve on the Yangtze River
so that a new hydropower scheme could go forward.
The unprecedented dam
building spree is being pushed by provincial governments and state-owned
energy companies, which often pursue vested interests. In the past,
these actors were kept in check by a coalition of environmental
activists, journalists and government officials, who often managed to
gain the ear of China's top leaders. This has
changed since
Copenhagen. International pressure to limit greenhouse gas emissions
is the single most important factor behind the huge push for hydropower
in China.
Climate change is the most serious environmental threat of our
generation. Yet the international community should address this threat
in a holistic way, without losing sight of other challenges to the
planet's future. The world is losing biodiversity at an alarming rate.
Rivers, lakes and wetlands have suffered more dramatic changes than any
other type of ecosystem. Because of dam building and other factors,
freshwater species have on average lost half their populations between
1970 and 2000, and more than a third of all freshwater fishes are at
risk of extinction.
As the head of the UN
Environmental Programme
warned last year, it would be arrogant to assume that humanity can
survive without biodiversity. We cannot sacrifice the planet's arteries
to save her lungs. China not only has a moral
obligation to participate in the fight against climate change. The
country has also committed to protecting its ecosystems under the
Convention on Biological Diversity. It deserves respect for trying
to limit greenhouse gas emissions at a per-capita level which is much
lower than what industrialized nations emit. World leaders should let
the government in Beijing
know that they don't want
China
to destroy her rivers and the rich biodiversity they support to reach
her ambitious carbon goals.
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Petere Bosshard is the policy director of International Rivers, an
international environmental and human rights organization
Source:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/mar/04/china-dams-emissions-carbon-hydropower
Submitted
by Conservation Chairman Bill Luther
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