(August 17, 2009) Chinese authorities began Sunday relocating the first batch of rural residents totaling 10,600 in central Henan Province to make way for one of the three routes of the country’s massive South-to-North Water Diversion Project.
A plan for water shortage in Mekong River needed
(August 14, 2009) Experts who attended a seminar about Vietnam’s economy in Can Tho last week said Vietnam needs to develop a plan to confront the water shortage of the Mekong River.
Flood torrents pass Three Gorges Dam safely
(August 7, 2009) Photographs taken on August 6, 2009 show a panorama of the Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River in Yichang City of central China’s Hubei Province, include shots of the flood waters moving through the dam.
Call for cooperation in fish conservation related to Dams (Chinese sturgeon)
Hi, here is Dr. Parker Stone in China Three Gorges University call for international cooperation.
Beijing “borrows” water amid less precipitation
(August 13, 2009) Less rainfall has prompted Beijing to channel in more than 300 million cubic meters of water from the neighboring Hebei Province as of July, an official said here Wednesday.
Memo from Dr. Guy R. Lanza to Belize Institute of Environmental Law and Policy (BELPO)
(August 12, 2009) Memo from Dr. Guy R. Lanza to BELPO concerning the discolouration of the Macal River in August 2009.
Damn the Dams
(August 9, 2009) Bhutan, India, Nepal & Pakistan are commissioning, contracting, planning hundred of dams along the Himalayans. Time is ticking out for the world community who are conscious about the negative consequences of a dam.
Beijing citizens invited to express opinions about city’s water prices
(August 7, 2009) In an unusual move, Beijing’s Office of Legislative Affairs has invited the capital city’s residents to comment on a proposed fee schedule for "renewable" water or recycled water.
Groundwater overuse endangers Beijing-Shanghai railway
(January 25, 2004) The eastern plain in north China’s Hebei Province has a long record of groundwater over-exploitation. Now it finds itself home to the world’s largest acreage of subsidence.
Five areas of subsidence in Beijing
(August 4, 2009) Subsidence areas are appearing in Beijing, the result of long overexploiting the groundwater to the extent of about 100 million litres a year. Five main subsidence areas have emerged. They are already challenging city planning, as well as endangering residential conditions.
Beijing uses reclaimed water to replenish rivers and lakes
(July 23, 2009) Amid the heat wave, clean rivers and lakes such as the Kunyu River and Forbidden City Moat have brought some cool to the city of Beijing. Residents perhaps do not realize that the clean water in those rivers mostly came from recycled water.
At what cost are carbon credits funding hydro projects in the developing world
(August 7, 2009) The Carbon Development Mechanism (CDM), a market-based tool developed by the UN to cut green house gas emissions, may be heralding a boon in hydro development projects in China and the developing world – and doing so at the cost of the environment and local landowners. As policy makers and environmentalists across the globe prepare for the Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen this winter, criticisms of carbon credit schemes like the CDM are begining to surface.
Carbon credit fraud in the UK
(August 6, 2009) A recent article in the Telegraph examines the rise in UK tax fraud in carbon emissions trading market. The scheme is a variation on the VAT carousel fraud, where criminals import products VAT-free from EU member states, then sell the goods in the UK with a VAT charge, only to quickly disappear without turning over the VAT charge to the UK’s customs and tax department, Her Majesty’s Revenue & Customs.
More than 37,000 Chinese dams could collapse from excess rain
(August 5, 2009) Earthquake damaged many dams in Sichuan (where more than 90 per cent of China’s dams are located). Monsoon rains are becoming increasingly powerful. Emergency plans are lacking. This summer could bring dangers.
Fatal Mudslides in Southern and Central China
(August 3, 2009) Over the past four days, torrentials rains have caused havock in central and southern China killing a dozen people.


