(December 27, 2005) Scientists in China are preparing a drastic rescue plan for one of the planet’s rarest animals – a dolphin with the misfortune of living in one of China’s busiest and most polluted rivers.
Yangtze dam workers race against time
(December 28, 2005) With cracks to fill and toxins to remove before the water rises next year, the people of the Yangtze can only hope no one cuts any fatal corners, John Gittings writes.
China blows up Three Gorges downstream cofferdam
(December 28, 2005) The downstream cofferdam was demolished on July 1, two months ahead of schedule, Xinhua reports.
Three Gorges project cuts cost estimate
(December 29, 2005) Project officials still need to raise US$7.2 billion to complete construction of the world’s biggest dam.
Mekong Panel Lacks Transparency: NGOs
(September 26, 2008) As a three-day meeting of the Mekong River Commission focusing on hydropower development started Thursday in Vientiane, a regional alliance of NGOs blasted the commission for failing to publicize critical information on the Mekong dams.
Statement: Questioning the MRC’s “Sustainable hydropower development”
(September 24, 2008) Thai People’s Network for Mekong & The Rivers Coalition in Cambodia.
Will Veolia Environnement Crack the Chinese Water Market?
(September 24, 2008) Veolia Environnement (VE) is a global leader in the provision of water infrastructure. It is a massive company, with revenues in 2007 of 32.6 billion euros (about $48 billion) and an after-tax profit of 927.9 million euros ($1.37 billion). It achieved good growth in its June 2008 half-year results, and expects its profits to grow for the full year.
Statement: Questioning the MRC’s “Sustainable hydropower development”
(September 24, 2008) Extensive hydropower development continues to threaten the ecological integrity of the Mekong River Basin almost a year after 201 organizations and individuals from 30 countries called on the Mekong River Commission (MRC) to sound the alarm on the serious consequence of hydropower dam development on the lower Mekong River.
The true cost of coal in China
In 2007 alone, the total external costs of coal use in China reached RMB 1.7 trillion, equal to 7.1 per cent of China’s 2007 GDP. A new report on the true cost […]
Unconstitutional regimes and the validity of sovereign debt: A legal perspective
(September 18, 2008) Go to book
Beijing taps emergency water supply
(September 18, 2008) Probe International Fellow Dai Qing is surprised that Beijing is diverting water from Hebei province weeks after the government announced it wouldn’t need to do so for the Olympics.
The Yangtze River’s journey from heaven to hell
(October 12, 1999) Environmental campaigners say the Yangtze is just the latest, biggest example of the flipside of China’s ‘economic miracle’ and that the Three Gorges dam, by slowing the river’s flow, will worsen the pollution.
Explosives ready to demolish last Three Gorges cofferdam
(September 27, 1999) Electronic triggers will control 2,540 detonators, which will set off 971 consecutive explosions around the cofferdam when it is blown up on June 6, Xinhua reports.
Cofferdam demolition won’t endanger main wall of Three Gorges dam
(August 31, 1999) Two rows of ‘bubble curtains,’ resembling car air-bags, will be set in an effort to protect the main dam wall by absorbing 50 to 70 per cent of the energy from the huge blast that will demolish the top of the cofferdam Tuesday afternoon, Xinhua reports.
Demolishing Three Gorges cofferdam to take around 12 seconds
(August 31, 1999) The demolition on June 6 of the last cofferdam protecting the Three Gorges dam will take about 12 seconds and use 191 tons of explosives, enough to destroy 400 10-storey buildings, Xinhua reports.


