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Chinese government acknowledges Three Gorges Dam disaster
By John Chan
12 October 2007
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After hailing the huge Three Gorges Dam for years as a major
national achievement, the Chinese government has admitted for
the first time that the project could be a disastrous failure
with damaging environmental consequences. The about-face is not
a revision of Beijings promotion of the unfettered operation
of capitalist market. Just a year from the 2008 Beijing Olympics,
it is trying to improve Chinas ugly global image as a manufacturer
of shoddy goods, a giant sweatshop and a huge industrial polluter.
The Three Gorges Dam is located in the middle of the Yangtze
River, with a total power generating capacity of 22,500 megawattsfar
larger than the world second largest dam in South America. Commenced
in 1994, it has cost more than $US25 billion and is still not
fully completed. Pushed by former President Jiang Zemin as a prestige
project, the dam came to symbolise Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
policy in 1990s of opening up to foreign capital.
Public criticism of the dam was suppressed.
Now a different assessment is being made. On September 26,
the official Xinhua news agency reported a high-level meeting
of government officials at which the many ecological and
environmental problems concerning the Three Gorges Dam were
acknowledged. Participants expressed concern that if no
preventive measures are taken, the project could lead to catastrophe.
Wang Xiaofeng, the head of the Three Gorges Dam Project of the
State Council declared: We cannot win passing economic prosperity
at the cost of the environment.
The meeting discussed the glaring problems previously unacknowledged
by the authorities. The most serious were landslides caused by
the 600-kilometre reservoir that began to fill last year. Tan
Qiwei, the vice mayor of Yangtzes major city Chongqing,
pointed out that slippages had occurred at 91 places along the
reservoir, and that 36 kilometres of shoreline had caved in. He
said the landslides had produced waves of up to 50 metres high.
A number of farmers and fishermen have been killed in recent months.
The experts also warned of the danger of sedimentation caused
by the reduced speed of the Yangtze water flow behind the dam.
The rising silt levels could eventually make sections of the Yangtze
impassible for shipping and even block the sluice gates with potentially
disastrous consequences. In August 1975, the Banqiao Dams
sluice gates were blocked amid heavy rainfall leading to severe
flash flooding that killed 26,000 people. Another 145,000 perished
from subsequent famine and disease.
Aquatic life in the Yangtze and its tributaries is also in
danger. Severe water pollution has resulted from chaotic industrial
expansion over the past decade to take advantage of the power
and transport opportunities promised by the Three Gorges Dam.
Unregulated logging in the surrounding areas has weakened the
river banks, increasing the risk of landslides. In recent years,
the authorities have closed or relocated 1,500 factories and built
more than 70 waste treatment plants, as well as spending $1.5
billion to geologically stabilise the area. The underlying problems
remain, however.
There is an immediate political motive in declaring the Three
Gorges Dam to be a disaster just three weeks before
this months key 17th national CCP congress. Criticism of
a project closely identified with former President Jiang Zemin
and his faction can only assist the current President Hu Jintao
and his supporters to consolidate their grip on top leadership
committees. Moreover, one of the disputes between the two factions
centres on the pace of economic development. Unlike Jiang, Hu
has sought to rein in economic growth and speculative investment
out of concern for economic instability.
An article by London-based Times on September 27 pointed
out that Hu distanced himself from the Three Gorges Dam by staying
away from the completion ceremonies last year. Dai Qing, an environmental
activist told the newspaper that after suppressing criticism for
years, they [Beijing] are starting to hear. The
Government knows it has made a mistake. Now they are afraid that
the catastrophe that they cannot prevent will spark civil unrest.
So they want to go public before the troubles start, she
said.
Open for investment
Jiang came to power amid the brutal crackdown on anti-government
protestors in Tiananmen Square in 1989. Chinese premier at the
time was Li Peng, who directly ordered troops to open fire. Li
was also the principal advocate for the Three Gorges Dam. A widely
reported reason was that his family had large business interests
in the countrys lucrative power generating industry. The
crackdown and the dam were both important signals to foreign investors
that China was open for business.
After the Tiananmen Square massacre, foreign investment flooded
into China, secure in the knowledge that Beijing would not hesitate
to suppress social unrest. In 1992, Li pressured the National
Peoples Congress (NPC) to rubber stamp the Three Gorges
Dam project, but only 67 percent of delegates approved itthe
lowest vote for any bill in history. Nevertheless, the decision
encouraged a rush by all levels of government to build infrastructure,
to attract investors and impress their political superiors. The
prime example has been the re-emergence of Shanghai as the metropolitan
centre of Chinese capitalism.
Chinas economic boom has generated explosive social tensions.
The gap between rich and poor is widening, official corruption
is rife and pollution is leading to environmental disasters. The
frenzied building of apartments, hotels, highways and industrial
parks has produced a speculative bubble in real estate development,
alongside a skyrocketing stock market. Powerful sections of the
business elite and local party bosses want the countrys
roaring economic growth rates to continue unimpeded.
Hus attempts at macroeconomic control have
had little impact. The US subprime crisis and the decision to
cut interest rates have come into conflict with Chinas need
to lift rates to control cheap credit for speculative projects.
Hu purged the Shanghai party leadership last September, because
of its resistance to his attempts to control the overheated
economy. The criticisms of the Three Gorges Dam are another warning
shot to those intent on profiteering from infrastructure projects.
The last consideration in the debate over the dam is the needs
of working people and the sustainable utilisation of natural resources.
Despite its shortcomings, the dam has demonstrated the potential
for harnessing the Yangtzes water power. It is an important
safety valve to control the Yangtzes destructive floods
and provides much needed electricity throughout central China
as well as opening up new sections of the river for large vessels
in the economically important Yangtze valley.
Given previous experiences with dams on the Yellow River, the
designers of the Three Gorges Dam claimed to have established
a number of mechanisms to deal with sedimentation. To reduce the
risk of silt accumulating behind the Three Gorges Dam, Chinese
authorities outlined plans to build four new dams upstream. Collectively,
these dams will produce 38,500 megawatts of power, almost doubling
the Three Gorges Dams capacity.
When ship-lifting facilities at the Three Gorges Dam are completed,
it is estimated that Yangtze shipping will increase from 10 million
tonnes to 50 million tonnes per year, cutting transport costs
by one third. According to official estimates, the dams
hydropower will reduce Chinas coal consumption by 31 million
tonnes per year, thus cutting the emission of greenhouse gases,
dust and other discharges from coal-powered thermal plants.
The main cause of the environmental problems is not the dam
itself, but Beijings pro-market policies, which are creating
similar disasters throughout the country. Some 300 million people
lack access to clean water due to severe industrial pollution
in rivers and lakes. The unregulated exploitation of land for
agricultural and mining activities has caused the rapid advance
of desertsfrom making up 17.6 percent of Chinas land
area in 1994 to 27.5 percent today. Some 760,000 people die prematurely
each year due to air and water pollution. According to some analysts,
China could overtake the US this year as the worlds largest
emitter of greenhouse gases.
Having ignored environmental problems for years, the Chinese
authorities have been forced to consider the issues due to the
impact on the economy and the lifestyles of the emerging wealthy
elite. International financial circles have frequently noted that
poor air quality in Hong Kong, caused by factory complexes in
neighbouring Guangdong, is a minus for its investing environment.
Significantly, very little has been said of the social dislocation
caused by the Three Gorges Dam which has displaced 1.2 million
people. Compensation for the residents in 129 towns and cities
accounts for 45 percent of the total costs of the dam. However,
a large portion of the funds allocated for migrants has been stolen
by corrupt officials. The new communities established with relocated
factories, farms and populations have turned out to be economic
basket cases. In 2004, social tensions in Wangzhou exploded, when
80,000 workers and unemployed stormed government buildings and
clashed with police.
While Chinese authorities are now considering silting, deforestation
and the threats to aquatic life caused by the Three Gorges Dam,
no serious proposals have been made to address the social crisis
confronting those forced to leave their communities.
See Also:
Signs of leadership infighting
ahead of Chinese Communist Party congress
[25 September 2007]
Millions of toxic toys recalled:
The nightmarish reality of global capitalism
[16 August 2007]
China executes former food
and drug administration chief
[20 July 2007]
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