June 30, 2014
The Lao government has agreed to a lengthy public consultation
process with its neighbors before building a controversial hydropower
dam on the Mekong River, within 2 km of the Cambodian border, according
to the environmental group WWF.
Laos announced the 256-MW Don Sahong dam last year when it notified
the Mekong River Commission (MRC), an inter-governmental body of
officials from Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam, of its intentions
to begin construction by year’s end.
With that announcement, Laos skipped a required six-month “prior
consultation” process with its neighbors as required by the MRC under
the 1995 Mekong River Agreement for dams that may affect neighboring
countries’ waterways.
After months of criticism from environmentalists, who warned that the
dam would deplete fisheries in Cambodia, and requests from the
Cambodian and Vietnamese governments to halt the project, Laos agreed at
an MRC meeting last week to postpone the dam’s construction.
“Laos is now promising to do what they already signed up to under the
Mekong agreement, and should have done months ago,” Marc Goichot,
manager of sustainable hydropower and river basin management at WWF
Greater Mekong, said in an emailed statement.
“Their decision to consult on the Don Sahong project, and share
critical details about the project’s impacts, comes after intense
pressure from neighboring countries. It is critical that pressure is
maintained to ensure Laos delivers on their promise,” the statement
continues.
Kol Vathana, deputy secretary-general of the Cambodia National Mekong
Committee, said he was unaware of the decision by the Lao government
because he had not been at last week’s meeting. Neither Water Resources
Minister Lim Kean Hor nor his cabinet chief Chan Youttha could be
reached for comment.
Laos is already completing one dam on the Mekong, the controversial
Xayaburi dam, which went ahead despite the disapproval of Cambodia and
Vietnam. The Mekong River Agreement, which also requires a consensus
among MRC members before dams are built, is non-binding.
“There is currently little faith in the MRC’s process to ensure joint
decisions are made for the benefit of all Mekong nations,” said Mr.
Goichot. “If Laos fails to be held to account, the MRC will soon lose
its legitimacy and 60 million people living in the Mekong basin will
suffer.”

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