(October 22, 2008) Authorities in central China are considering closing polluting factories and opening a large reservoir to ease a drought that has left 78,000 rural people short of drinking water.
EVN slammed for fat bonus appeal despite loss claims
(October 21, 2008) Electricity of Vietnam (EVN) repeatedly proclaims its losses and lack of investment funds, but does not shy away from asking for huge bonuses to its staff, a National Assembly deputy said in a rebuke to an EVN request.
Lao dam argument doesn’t hold water
Laos has pinned its economic future on the Nam Theun 2 dam, but there is no buyer for its power and no commercial lenders in sight, writes Grainne Ryder.
Special report: Resettlement problems at Three Gorges dam continue unchecked
(April 7, 1999) Problems associated with the Three Gorges Dam resettlement programme have become so severe that relocatees have been officially petitioning the Central government to address them. Documents obtained by International Rivers Network reveal not only rampant corruption, extortion, falsification of data and inadequate compensation levels, but also the unwillingness of project managers in the Central government to address the situation is paving the way for serious conflict.
Three Gorges resettlement in chaos, awaiting central directives
(October 1, 1999) The resettlement of up to two million people who will be flooded out of their homes by China’s massive Three Gorges dam is in chaos, according to a Chinese sociologist.
Three Gorges dam to create huge, stagnant, stinking pond
(November 29, 1999) After thousands of years of letting their sewage flow downstream and out to sea, Chongqing and other Yangtze cities now face the prospect of it staying in the water that laps their shores. If completed as planned, the massive Three Gorges dam will slow the Yangtze river’s flow, backing up water and concentrating sewage and modern-day pollutants in its 600-kilometre reservoir. A Chinese scientist from Chongqing predicts it will be a “huge, stagnant, stinking pond.”
China’s Three Gorges dam faces financial death spiral
(December 16, 1999) Uneconomic and outmoded, the Three Gorges dam will have difficulty finding customers for its electricity in China’s rapidly modernizing electricity market, according to a new Probe International report.
Chinese government orders Farmers out of Three Gorges region
(January 18, 2000) In a dramatic shift in policy, China’s central government recently announced plans to move 125,000 rural people out of the Three Gorges dam region – a departure from its original plan to resettle farmers locally by moving them uphill to new land or by providing them with new jobs in the vicinity of the dam.
China’s official media reports Three Gorges dam investment and resettlement figures
(January 18, 2000) China News Agency reported on January 12 that the Three Gorges dam has cost the Chinese government $5.65 billion (all figures in U.S. dollars) since construction began in 1993.
Three Gorges dam builder pushes ahead with more giant dams on the Yangtze
(February 21, 2000) The Chinese corporation in charge of building the massive Three Gorges dam has already started building another giant dam on a downstream tributary and has plans for another two dams upstream.
Chinese officials caught embezzling Three Gorges resettlement funds
(February 21, 2000) China’s State Auditing Administration has revealed that local officials have embezzled about $57.7 million (all figures in U.S. dollars) in Three Gorges resettlement funds. This graft represents almost 12 percent of the total $487.8 million that the central government has allocated for relocating the 1.2 million people who will be flooded out of the Three Gorges area if dam construction continues as planned.
Three Gorges executive fired for malfeasance
(March 24, 2000) The official Chinese media has reported another Three Gorges corruption scandal, this time linked to top executives at the companies responsible for building the world’s largest hydrodam.
Why consumers and citizens should pull the plug on the Asian Development Bank- part 1 of 2
(May 3, 2000) Without market discipline or public oversight, the ADB is a financial and environmental menace, providing a breeding ground for electricity investments that destroy the environment, create poverty, sink Asian citizens in debt, cost taxpayers in donor countries money, and deprive consumers of cheaper, better generating options.
Three Gorges dam is black hole of corruption, says Chinese journalist
(May 25, 2000) Racked by allegations of mismanagement and corruption, scandal surrounds China’s Three Gorges Dam project once again following two recent exposés involving senior officials and vast sums of missing project funds.
Chinese leaders assure critics Three Gorges dam progress smooth
(June 16, 2000) A petition to delay the Three Gorges dam project earlier this year drew a firm response from Chinese leaders, quick to assure critics the scandal-plagued project was “progressing smoothly” and would go ahead as planned.


