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'Seven years later, the Three Georges dam appears to be China’s greatest short-sighted decision in its era of modernization and industrial development.'
By Emile Bouffard
Global Research, February 08, 2013
The Political Bouillon
China’s Three Gorges dam, completed in 2006 and put
into use last summer, is the world’s largest source of ‘clean’ hydroelectric
power. With a generating capability equal to that of 15 nuclear reactors, the
project has been hailed as a solution to China’s massive energy crisis.
However, before the project had even been completed, major concerns were voiced
over the potentially disastrous environmental repercussions of this massive
engineering project. Seven years later, the Three Georges dam appears to be
China’s greatest short-sighted decision in its era of modernization and
industrial development.
The dam has certainly been a crucial element of
China’s ‘green’ initiative, aimed at decreasing reliance on non-renewable
sources of energy, in particular, coal. However a decrease in carbon emissions
does not necessarily create an environmentally friendly energy strategy – for
example, the use of the colossal reservoir had led to weakening of the river
banks, causing massive landslides in populated areas. And these are just the
beginnings of the problems.
The creation of the dam has slowed the normally quick
flowing river, causing silt in the water to settle on the riverbed. This not
only decreases the concentration of nutrients in the water, but damages
existing ecosystems. Stagnant water in the reservoir could also boost pollution
levels and water-borne diseases; already major issues for the population in the
area. While constructing the dam, the Chinese government moved an estimated 1.3
million people from their ancestral homeland along the river valley. As the
reservoir continues to weaken the riverbank, erosion is expected to displace
another 100, 000 people. Decreased level of silt downriver of the dam may lead
to poorer agricultural yields , with important nutrients settling to the bottom
of the reservoir. Perhaps the most frightening possible consequences of the reservoir
is an increase in earthquakes. Geologists fear that the weight of the reservoir
may actually cause seismic activity over the two major fault lines that the dam
rests on.
In addition, vulnerability of China’s already
endangered species is increasing, as huge amounts of water are moved around the
watershed. Many fragile ecosystems have been destroyed when water levels have
changed dramatically. Wetlands, home to many unique species, are especially
susceptible to changes in the river – populations of species such as the Baiji
dolphin, Chinese sturgeon, and the Siberian crane are endangered because of the
Three Gorges dam project.
The Three Gorges Dam shows with brutal clarity, that
China traded short-term gains for long-term social and ecological problems. The
energy gained by this project is not clean, and it will have long-lasting
effects on a waterway that runs through over half of the country. The
environmental effects of this dam will be long-term, and in most cases,
irreversible.
Now that the Three Gorges Dam is in full use, these
environmental problems will have to be solved rather than prevented. The
world’s largest ‘clean energy’ project has already caused and will continue to
cause permanent geological and ecological damage.
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