The proposed Xayabury Dam on the lower Mekong River promises to supply much-needed energy to the region, but at a “devastating” environmental and personal cost to surrounding communities, say activists and environmental experts.
“Millions more people in the region are likely to be adversely [affected] through changes to the river’s biodiversity, fisheries and sediment flows,” said Ame Trandem with International Rivers, a US-based environmental NGO.
The dam’s main developer is Thai construction company Ch Karnchang.
Sixty-five million people depend on the Mekong River – the largest inland fishery in the world – for survival and its biodiversity is second only to the Amazon in South America, according to Jeremy Bird, director of the Laos-based Mekong River Commission (MRC), a regional intergovernmental advisory body on any mainstream development conducted on the river.
More than 200,000 fishermen and farmers – most of the lower riverside community – will suffer displacement and reduced earnings if the Xayabury Dam is built in Laos, states International Rivers.
Based on the 2010 Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) commissioned by MRC, “dam construction will result in irreversible environmental impacts”, said MRC spokeswoman Tiffany Hacker.
Damage to fisheries “cannot be mitigated by fish passes and reservoirs”, said Alan Brooks, director of the Phnom Penh-based NGO, World Fish Center.
Read more of the story here at the IRIN news service:
LAOS: Decision expected on controversial Mekong dam
Related articles
- Floods Highlight Lack of Disaster Preparedness (netnewspublisher.com)
- Lawmakers Meet to Address Domestic Violence in Laos (netnewspublisher.com)
- Midwife Training Resumes in Laos After 20 Years (netnewspublisher.com)













