If you are in the US or another country that cannot watch this video clip, then try this Facebook page.
Thẻ: Dams on Mekong
Letters from the Mekong: A Call for Strategic Basin-Wide Energy Planning in Laos
This issue brief—the third in Stimson’s “Letters from the Mekong” series — continues to challenge the prevailing narrative that the current rapid pace of dam construction on the Mekong River in mainland Southeast Asia will continue until the entire river is turned into a series of reservoirs. Certainly, the construction of even a few large dams will severely impact food security in the world’s most productive freshwater fishery and sharply reduce the delivery of nutrient-rich sediment needed to sustain agriculture, especially in Cambodia and Vietnam’s Mekong Delta. However, our team’s extensive research over a number of years, including site visits and meetings with regional policymakers, provides compelling evidence that not all of the planned dams will be built due to rising political and financial risks, including questions about the validity of current supply and demand projections in the greater Mekong region. As a consequence, we have concluded that it is not yet too late for the adoption of a new approach that optimizes the inescapable “nexus” tradeoffs among energy, export revenues, food security, and fresh water and protects the core ecology of the river system for the benefit of future generations.
In particular, through a continued examination of rising risks and local and regional responses to those risks, we believe that Laos and Cambodia will fall far short of current plans for more than 100 dams on the Mekong mainstream and tributaries. This reality will have particular implications for Laos, which seeks to become the “Battery of Southeast Asia” by setting the export of hydropower to regional markets as its top economic development priority.
In the case of Laos in particular, the reluctant recognition that its dream of damming the Mekong are in jeopardy may cause a reconsideration of its development policy options. Fewer Lao dams will mean that national revenue targets will not be met. Already the government has begun to make overtures for US and other donor assistance in managing the optimization of its hydropower resources. This is not surprising since Lao decision makers depend almost entirely on outside developers to build out its planned portfolio of dams under commercial build-own-operate-transfer (BOOT) concessions for export to neighboring countries. All of these dams are being constructed in a one-off, project-byproject manner with no prior input from the intergovernmental Mekong River Commission (MRC) or neighboring countries, and hence there is little practical opportunity for synergistic planning that could optimize the benefits of water usage on a basin-wide scale.
Because planners cannot see past the next project, it is impossible to determine to what extent the targets for the final power output of either Laos or the basin as a whole are achievable. Further, critical red lines of risk tolerance, particularly toward the environmental and social risks that impede dam construction, are unidentifiable because the government has little stake invested in the projects and derives few resources from the BOOT process to mitigate risk.
By 2020 roughly 30% of the Mekong basin’s power potential in Laos will be tapped by existing dams and those currently under construction. Beyond 2020 the prospect for completing the remaining 70 plus dams planned or under study by the Lao Ministry of Energy and Mines is unknowable. As Lao officials begin to realize they will not necessarily meet their development goals, there will still be time to transition to a basin-wide, strategic energy plan that meets projected revenue goals while minimizing impacts on key environmental flows through a combination of fewer dams and other non-hydropower sources of clean energy generation.
MEKONG: The Delta – Phim tài liệu về Mekong
Dams, Drought and Disaster Along the Mekong River
This article originally appeared in IRIN News.
CHONG PRA LAY/CAMBODIA, 10 May 2016
internationalriver – The dry months before the monsoon rains arrive are often tough for Cambodian fishermen and farmers. But with rivers drying up and drinking water running out, conditions have rarely been as bad as they are now.
The current drought is linked to El Niño, which has been disrupting weather patterns around the world. But the harsh conditions today might only be foreshadowing far worse to come. Climate change will continue to affect the Mekong Basin region, while future droughts are expected to be exacerbated by a string of major hydropower dam projects.
Experts fear that the present crisis could become the new normal for Cambodia and its neighbours, which have also been hit hard by record temperatures and a long period of extremely dry weather.
“The combined effects of drought, climate change and dam building are pushing the resources of the Mekong Basin to the brink of disaster,” said Maureen Harris, Southeast Asia programme director of the river protection organisation, International Rivers. Tiếp tục đọc “Dams, Drought and Disaster Along the Mekong River”
Vietnam, Laos Tackle South China Sea, Mekong in Bilateral Meeting
Last week, Laos’ newly elected president visited Vietnam in a bid to boost ties following leadership transitions in the two communist neighbors.
Bounnhang Vorachith, who clinched the post of Laos’ Communist Party chief back in January before being appointed president on April 20 by the National Assembly, made his official visit to Vietnam, which had also just finished going through its quinquennial Party Congress. The visit, which was his first overseas trip, lasted from April 25 to 27 and saw him meet with several top Vietnamese officials in Hanoi, including General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam Nguyen Phu Trong, President Tran Dai Quang, Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, and Vietnam’s first ever chairwoman of the National Assembly Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan. The Lao president then wrapped up his trip with a visit to Ho Chi Minh city. Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam, Laos Tackle South China Sea, Mekong in Bilateral Meeting”
New rule-based order needed to save the Mekong
Tiếp tục đọc “New rule-based order needed to save the Mekong” Việt Nam: Biến đổi khí hậu, đập thủy điện sẽ ảnh hưởng thảm khốc đến khu vực Mê kông.
English – Vietnam: Climate change, dams will drastically impact Mekong region
| Hàng triệu người có nguồn sinh kế dựa vào sông Mê Kong đang gặp rủi ro trước mối đe doạ kép của biến đổi khí hậu và các nhà máy thuỷ điện. Mặc dù nhà máy thuỷ điện thường được xem là một phần giải pháp chống biến đổi khí hậu, nhưng trong trường hợp này, thuỷ điện thực tế lại là mối đe dọạ khẩn cấp hơn.
Khi phát triển kinh tế và cạnh tranh gây tổn hại tới thịnh vượng Tiếp tục đọc “Việt Nam: Biến đổi khí hậu, đập thủy điện sẽ ảnh hưởng thảm khốc đến khu vực Mê kông.” |
Facing Mekong Drought, China to Release Water From Yunnan Dam
In response to a request from Vietnam, China is discharging water from a dam in Yunnan.

thediplomat_ China has promised to discharge water from a dam along the Lancang River (better known as the Mekong) to help alleviate drought conditions in Southeast Asia. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lu Kang announced Tuesday in a regular press conference that China will release water from the Jinghong hydropower station in Yunnan province from March 15 to April 10, to provide water “for emergency use” by countries downstream.
“People living along the Lancang-Mekong River are nourished by the same river,” Lu noted. “It goes without saying that friends should help each other when help is needed.”
Yet the question of dams on the Mekong has not been as friendly as Lu makes it seem. As The Diplomat’s Luke Hunt noted last week, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia have been squabbling over dam construction and water usage, particularly as a severe drought threatens rice crop yields across the Indochina Peninsula.
China is also a part of that conversation – a major part, as the Mekong (called the Lancang in China) originates on the Tibetan plateau and flows through the provinces of Qinghai, Tibet, and Yunnan before ever reaching Southeast Asia. China opened its first large dam on the Lancang, the Manwan in Yunnan, in 1994, and added the Dachaoshan dam in 2003. In recent years, hydropower construction has revved into high gear, with China completing four additional dams since 2009 — and plans for another seven in the works. Tiếp tục đọc “Facing Mekong Drought, China to Release Water From Yunnan Dam”
Tác động thủy điện trên Mêkông: nghiêm trọng hay không đáng kể?
Anh Thi – Thứ Ba, 3/11/2015, 19:10 (GMT+7)
(TBKTSG Online) – Báo cáo “Nghiên cứu tác động của các công trình thủy điện trên dòng chính sông Mêkông” đã được Ủy ban Sông Mêkông Việt Nam (VNMC) cùng với các đơn vị tư vấn trình bày tại một phiên hội thảo đặc biệt ngày 21-10-2015 trong khuôn khổ Diễn đàn Nước, Lương thực và Năng lượng tiểu vùng Mêkông mở rộng diễn ra tại Phnôm Pênh (Campuchia) từ 21 đến 23-10-2015.
![]() |
| hội thảo tham vấn quốc gia về Báo cáo đánh giá tác động ngày 28-10-2015 tại Hà Nội. Nguồn: UB sông Mê-kông VN |
Tiếp đó, VNMC cũng đã tổ chức hội thảo tham vấn quốc gia về Báo cáo đánh giá tác động ngày 28-10-2015 tại Hà Nội và ngày 30-10-2015 tại TPHCM. Theo VNMC, Báo cáo này dự kiến hoàn thành vào giữa tháng 11-2015 sẽ là nội dung chính trong báo cáo cuối cùng của Nghiên cứu với dự thảo đầu tiên sẽ được đưa ra tham vấn rộng rãi vào đầu tháng 12-2015. Hiện nay, VNMC cùng với các tư vấn đang lấy ý kiến trên trang web của dự án (https://wle-mekong.cgiar.org/study-on-the-impacts-of-mainstream-hydropower-on-the-mekong-river/) cho đến hết ngày 6-11-2015.
Tiếp tục đọc “Tác động thủy điện trên Mêkông: nghiêm trọng hay không đáng kể?”
Một kết luận nguy hiểm về những con đập trên sông MeKong
GS.TSKH NGUYỄN NGỌC TRÂN (*) – 31/10/2015 09:29 GMT+7
TT – Những con đập trên sông MeKong tác hại không đáng kể là một kết luận nguy hiểm vì nó liên quan đến môi trường, sản xuất nông nghiệp, thủy sản, đời sống của gần 18 triệu người dân.
![]() |
| Trang bìa của báo cáo dự án do Bộ TN&MT cùng VNMC thực hiện đang gây bức xúc cho nhiều nhà khoa học |
“Tác động của 11 đập thủy điện trên sông Mekong lên đồng bằng sông Cửu Long là không đáng kể”! Đó là kết luận của báo cáo dự án “Nghiên cứu tác động của các đập thủy điện trên dòng chính hạ lưu sông Mekong lên châu thổ sông Mekong, trong đó có đồng bằng sông Cửu Long (MDS, Mekong Delta Study)” mà Ủy ban sông Mekong Việt Nam (VNMC) cùng với tư vấn là Viện Thủy lợi Đan Mạch (DHI) dự kiến trình bày tại một hội nghị quốc tế.
Tiếp tục đọc “Một kết luận nguy hiểm về những con đập trên sông MeKong”
Environment experts discuss dam dangers
| Thirty-five experts from environmental organisations in Cambodia, Laos and Viet Nam gathered yesterday to discuss water management and the effects of hydropower dams. — Illustrative photo thoidai.com.vn |
DONG THAP (VNS) — Thirty-five experts from environmental organisations in Cambodia, Laos and Viet Nam gathered yesterday to discuss water management and the effects of hydropower dams.
They participated in a one-day seminar held in Dong Thap Province in the Mekong Delta and discussed the impacts that dams built on rivers in the Indochina region have on local communities, including those along the Mekong River. Tiếp tục đọc “Environment experts discuss dam dangers”




