(June 4, 2007) SIDA responds to Compliance Review of the SIDA-funded Environmental Impact Assessment on the Cambodian side of the Sre Pok River due to hydropower development in Vietnam.
Xiamen anti-pollution protests: What next?
(June 4, 2007) The eastern coastal city of Xiamen, Fujian province, has witnessed what are probably the biggest urban-based demonstrations in China since the movement against state sector sackings and privatisation in the northeast in 2002.
ELECTRICITY OF VIETNAM: Toxic algae in Vietnam’s second largest hydro reservoir linked to illnesses in downstream Cambodia
(July 4, 2007) New reservoirs could produce toxic algae for 5 to 10 years.
Wuxi breathes easy again, but water still undrinkable
(June 2, 2007) A team of water pollution experts have succeeded in dispelling the unpleasant odor from the water supply of east China’s Wuxi city, but authorities say the water is still not safe to drink.
Srepok 3 supply contract awarded
(July 2, 2007) Electricity of Vietnam (EVN) and the China National Technical Export and Import Corporation (CNTIC) have signed an agreement under which CNTIC will supply various equipment worth US$40.2M to the Serepok 3 hydroelectric power plant in northern Vietnam.
42.27 million Chinese affected by floods, drought
42.27 million Chinese have been affected by floods and drought so far this year, the Office of the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters said on Monday.
Yangtze Power Co. – Power industry reshuffle continues
(June 1, 2007) China Power Investment Corp and China Yangtze Power Co yesterday agreed to pay 1.3 billion yuan for 18.92 percent of Shanghai Electric Power Co.
Devilry, Complicity, and Greed: Transitional Justice and Odious Debt
(June 1, 2007) The doctrine of odious debts came into its full in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century to deal with the financial injustices of colonialism and its stalking horse, despotism. The basic rule, as articulated by Alexander Sack in 1927, is that debts incurred by an illegitimate regime that neither benefit nor have the consent of the people of a territory are personal to the regime and are subject to unilateral recision by a successor government.
Seeing Redd: Avoided deforestation and the rights of Indigenous Peoples and local communities
(June 1, 2007) A look at the effect UN deforestation programs could have on the livelihoods of indigenous people.
Unconstitutional Regimes and the Validity of Sovereign Debt
(June 1, 2007) A Legal Perspective: Unconstitutional Regimes and the Validity of Sovereign Debt
Has Veolia Water overstepped the mark in China?
(June 2007) GWI China editor Kathy Liu suggests that the French company may be making some powerful enemies as it continues its drive to be the leading player in the country’s water market.
SUSTAINABLE ENERGY FUTURE: Interview with US energy expert Amory Lovins
(June 1, 2007) What does a sustainable energy future look like and how do we go about creating it?
Earthquake Reports
(May 31, 2007) Read here about the effect of earthquakes on dams… and vice versa.
Odious debt in retrospect
(May 30, 2007) Current interest in the problem of “odious debt” is intertwined with other problems that afflict many developing and emerging market countries: despotic governments, unsustainable external debt burdens, and large-scale official corruption. If the universe of odious debt cases is relatively small, then it is likely uneconomical to develop an extensive legal apparatus ex ante.
Aid-backed hydro project in India sells carbon credits
(May 29, 2007) An aid-financed Norwegian hydro company, SN Power, will earn carbon credits from its hydro project in northern India, according to the Nordic aid monitor, Development Today. The 192-megawatt Allain Duhungan hydropower project in northern India received UN approval as a CDM project on May 17.


