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  1. #1
    Thailand Expat misskit's Avatar
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    China’s Mekong River Dams Compounded 2019 Drought, US-Funded Study Claims

    China compounded a drought that devastated fishing and farming communities on the Mekong River last year by restricting the flow of huge amounts of water downstream from 11 of its dams, a U.S. research firm said in a study released Monday.


    Satellite measurements of “surface wetness” indicated that the Chinese dams in the Upper Mekong had “above-average” water levels when last year’s drought took place in Thailand and other countries downstream, Alan Basist, president of the research company Eyes on Earth Inc., told BenarNews.


    “They didn’t directly cause the drought, but they compounded it,” Basist said, referring to the Chinese dams.


    Basist co-wrote the U.S. government-funded study, which used satellite data during a 28-year period to come up with a calculation that Chinese dams had held back “a huge volume of water.”


    “The satellite observations provide measurements of surface wetness, which can be directly translated into river flow,” Basist said.


    “The satellites showed … basically, 2019 was an extreme event of restriction of flow from the upper basin,” he said. “It’s being restricted by the 11 dams in China.”


    The Mekong, the world’s 12th-longest river, stretches through six nations before draining into the South China Sea. Its waters flow from China past Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam, affecting more than 60 million people who depend on the Mekong and its tributaries for food, transport and water.


    Basist emphasized that there was a major drought occurring in the lower basin, which mainly caused parts of the river to dry up, leaving cracked riverbeds even during a rainy season when fishing should have been plentiful. Reports said the Lower Mekong’s water level last year was its lowest during the past 50 years.


    “The primary cause was from a severe drought in the Lower Mekong. The lack of water from China only amplified the drought,” he said.


    The study did not examine the flow of water downstream, including in Laos where two new dams were also opened late last year.


    A spokesman from China’s Ministry Foreign Affairs rejected the Eye’s on Earth’s study as “unreasonable,” saying Yunnan province also saw serious drought last year.


    “Despite this, China has continued to do its utmost to guarantee reasonable discharge volumes” to countries downstream, the ministry said in a statement to Reuters news service.


    In early 2020, the Mekong River Commission (MRC), an inter-governmental agency that works with regional governments to manage the river’s resources, warned that water outflows could potentially drop as Beijing said it was testing equipment at one of its 11 dams on the Upper Mekong.


    During a meeting with his Southeast Asian counterparts in February, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said Chinese dams on the Mekong – which China calls the Lancang – would release water, and Beijing would consider sharing hydrology information to assist its neighbors in the future.


    Wang made the remarks in response to criticism that rampant damming on the Mekong would transform the economies of the five other countries downstream and contribute to long-term inflation and dependence on China.


    Critics and NGOs fault China’s dams on the Mekong for contributing to the drought that severely damaged agriculture and fisheries in its neighboring nations. But Wang said the drought was mostly caused by a lack of rain and pointed out that China had also suffered economic losses.


    “China has overcome its own difficulty and increased water outflow from the Lancang River to help Mekong countries mitigate the drought,” Wang told the meeting.

    China’s Mekong River Dams Compounded 2019 Drought, US-Funded Study Claims

  2. #2
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by misskit View Post
    Eyes on Earth Inc.
    Let's play the game of:

    China’s Mekong River Dams Compounded 2019 Drought, US-Funded Study Claims-bubblespopping1-jpg


    "The findings by Eyes on Earth Inc., a research and consulting company specialising in water, published in a U.S.-government funded study, ....


    “If the Chinese are stating that they were not contributing to the drought, the data does not support that position,” said Alan Basist, a meteorologist and president of Eyes on Earth, which conducted the study with funding from the U.S. State Department’s Lower Mekong Initiative."

    Chinese dams held back Mekong waters during drought, study finds - EnviroLink Network

    https://share.america.gov/pompeo-tou...ng-initiative/
    A tray full of GOLD is not worth a moment in time.

  3. #3
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    What's up snivelling chinky sycophant, where did the nasty environmentalists hurt you?

  4. #4
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    Ask not I, a privileged westerner, ask the millions of people around our globe whom ameristani governments have slaughtered for centuries.

  5. #5
    Thailand Expat

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    No matter how you cut it, these Chinky bastards are fucking Ebola and no matter what the swine touch, it turns to fucking dust.

  6. #6
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by OhOh View Post
    Ask not I, a privileged westerner, ask the millions of people around our globe whom ameristani governments have slaughtered for centuries.
    Ah, the old HoHo "Whatabout", we haven't seen that for a while.

  7. #7
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    Farang Ky Ay's Avatar
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    Sadly this was to be expected, there are several rivers significantly dried up by human use...the first that comes to my mind is the Colorado river.

  8. #8
    กงเกวียนกำเกวียน HuangLao's Avatar
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  9. #9
    R.I.P.
    crackerjack101's Avatar
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    The Mekong has been at it's lowest in the 10 years I've been here. Farmers have drained their, lakes, ponds and all water stores.
    Government water no longer exists,
    My neighbour, who is a fascinating old bloke, has for the first time not produced a rice crop. Financially he's fucked.
    Entrepreneurs are strapping 1000 liter tanks on the back of their pick ups and offering it for sale. Prices have escalated, naturally, and the time of 6000 liters for 300 BHT, are gone.
    It'd now more like 500 BHT for 1000 liters.
    We took my mother in law for a trip to river yesterday. She's lived near the Mekong for 83 years. She was so shocked she cried.

    Unless we get rain and or the Chinese release water into the river, our are is fucked.
    We've had two nights of 15 minute showers which has at least cleared the filthy air to a degree.

  10. #10
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    When I drove along the Mekong on the 1290 just before Xmas it looked like a fucking stream, let alone a river.

  11. #11
    R.I.P.
    crackerjack101's Avatar
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    I'd imagine that it would haven been little more than a stream in 1290.
    It is now a trickle a pitiful trickle.
    The water' a shiny blue indication no fish or wild life.

    It's truly disastrous.

  12. #12
    I'm in Jail

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    People seem to be learning the very hard way that there is an enormous, gigantic gap between what the Chinese say and what they do.

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