China to develop cooperation with MRC member countries PDF ພິມ ອີເມລ
ຂຽນໂດຍ Vientiane Times   
ວັນພະຫັດທີ່ 30 ກໍລິກົດ 2009 ເວລາ 11: 21
China  is  committed  to cooperating  further  with countries in the lower Mekong Basin to minimize downstream impacts  from  hydropower projects in the country.

The lower Mekong countries of Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand met with dialogue partners–China and Myanmar at the fourteenth dialogue meeting  of  the Mekong River Commission in Vientiane yesterday to discuss  cooperation efforts.
Chief  Executive  Officer of the MRC Secretariat, Mr Jeremy Bird said “We’ve seen  quite a significant strengthening of  the cooperation  between  lower Mekong  countries  and China and Myanmar.”

“Particular the willingness of  China  to  share  more information about the planning and operation of hydropower projects in the Lanchang River upstream.”

“They told us today about some  of  the  measures  they had taken to reduce and avoid impacts of significant flow changes  on  the  downstream countries,  and  it’s  a  very high  priority  to  take  into account the concerns of the downstream  countries,”  Mr Bird said.

China  is  committed  to participating  in  the  strategic environmental  assessment that the MRC is conducting on proposed hydropower projects in  the  lower  Mekong  Basin, according to Mr Bird.

“Also  important  is  how projects  in  China  will  be operated,” he said

“I think that we have seen significant  steps  forward  in our cooperation with China.”

During  yesterday’s meeting,  Thailand  and Vietnam  asked  China  for more  information  about  the day-to-day operations of their projects  to  see whether  there is  a  need  to  provide  some sort  of  warning  system  for downstream countries.

Mr  Bird  said  the contribution to levels in water fluctuations coming from China  has  been  very small much less than fluctuations  from  natural rainfall  conditions  in catchments areas in northern Thailand and Laos and southern China.

He said China has taken a lot of issues into consideration and  is now  committed  to stronger cooperation with MRC countries.

Concerning  climate change,  Mr  Bird  said  it  is a  long-term  question  as  to what  extent  dry  season lows will  be  reduced  and  drought conditions will  prevail more, as well as to what extent more extreme flooding  events  will occur.

“We have had a number of meetings to discuss and project what the changes could be and what the  implications would be,” he said.

“We  are  also  talking to  China  about  having  a partnership  where  we  can discuss  the  issue  of  climate change and what the impact of melting  glaciers would  be  in the downstream areas.”

“We  will  have  follow-up  meetings  to  determine concrete  steps  to  take forward the cooperation with China on these  sensitive issues.”

“I  think  there  will  be  a series  of  concrete  steps  in term  of Chinese  involvement in MRC’s studies and MRC involvement  in  Chinese activities.”