Dam Safety Analysis
Chapter 9
Missing Energy Perspectives
by Vaclav Smil, Ph.D.
Chapter 8
Flood Control Analysis
by Philip B. Williams, Ph.D., P.E.
Background
Chapter 7
Unresolved Issues: Perspectives from China
by Shiu-hung Luk, Ph.D., and Joseph Whitney, Ph.D.
The
Chinese feasibility study for the Three Gorges Project, which was
conducted under the aegis of the State Planning Commission,* remains a
secret government document. From 1987 to 1989, while official studies
were under way, numerous research papers1 on the feasibility of the Three Gorges Project were circulated and published in Chinese journals.
Chapter 6
Downstream Environmental Impacts
by Joseph S. Larson, Ph.D.
The
impacts which may occur downstream do not affect the overall
environmental feasibility and may indeed enhance the environment.1
Chapter 5
Potential Methyl Mercury Contamination in the Three Gorges Reservoir
by Alan Penn, M.Sc.
Background on Methyl Mercury Contamination
Chapter 4
Three Gorges Reservoir: Environmental Impacts
by David L. Wegner, M.Sc.
Background
A
reservoir is an impounded body of water created when a river or stream
is dammed and water is allowed to store. This impoundment of water has
an immediate impact on the physical and biological systems within the
reservoir which needs to be understood before the full range of
environmental impacts can be properly evaluated.
Chapter 3
Resettlement Plans for China’s Three Gorges Dam
by Philip M. Fearnside, Ph.D.
Chapter 2
What Dam Builders Don’t Want You to Know: A Summary
Chapter 1
Damming the Three Gorges: 1920 – 1993
Introduction
by Gráinne Ryder
Just weeks before the massacre at Tiananmen Square, China’s growing environmental movement had scored a momentous victory by successfully opposing the government’s plans to build the massive Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River. Vice Premier Yao Yilin had announced that the highly contentious project would be postponed for at least five years, saying that: “people do not need to spend too much energy debating this issue for the time being.”1 The unprecedented public repudiation of the proposed Three Gorges Dam was short-lived, however. It ended at Tiananmen Square, when the critics of the Three Gorges Dam were jailed and silenced along with other members of the pro-democracy movement.
Editor’s note to 2nd edition
This book is an updated and expanded edition of Damming
The Three Gorges: What Dam Builders Don’t Want You To Know, a critique
of a Canadian government-World Bank feasibility study of China’s Three
Gorges Dam. Originally published in September 1990, this book exposed
the flawed analyses and compromised calculations evident in the
official justification of a large dam project. Since the first edition
was published, others have discovered the same defects in other
justifications of other large dam projects.
About the contributors
About the Editors
Gráinne Ryder
worked as an engineer in Thailand on village water supply projects for
three years before joining Probe International in 1987 as a water
resources researcher. She headed an international effort to stop the
Three Gorges Project until 1990 when she returned to Thailand to
coordinate a campaign against a series of dams on the Mekong River.
Acknowledgements
We wish to give special thanks to Patricia Adams for her rigorous
editorial assistance, and her unflagging enthusiasm for the book.
Special
thanks also to Lawrence Solomon, for his patience and guidance
throughout preparation of the book, for his expert help with writing
and editing, and for his humour when driving a point home.
China helps Laos with development master plan for north
(July 9, 2008) The National Economic Analysis and Development Institute of Laos has drafted a master plan for development in nine northern provinces with the cooperation of Chinese experts from the Commission for the Reform and Development of Yunnan.


