Tag: hydropower

Chapter 6: In search of an honest judge

(May 3, 2009)

After the county and prefecture governments made it clear that local Shanyang cadres had not, in their view, committed any crimes of corruption, the villagers had to decide how to proceed. According to the regulations pertaining to China’s shangfang [appeals] system, petitioners were allowed to appeal to a higher level than the prefecture government – the provincial authorities. But Tailor Wang and the other "elite" of the affected people decided to go to the highest authorities of all, the top leaders in Beijing, by way of the provincial capital.

Chapter 5: Bending the rules

(May 3, 2009)

[quote] "Many problems have been solved to date but there are still problems left over from history. There is therefore a need to make every effort to address the masses’ problems according to central government policies and local conditions. When dealing with the problems, do whatever you can to fix them, by stages and in batches. When problems remain unresolved, the masses will persist in their appeals to higher authorities. And if the hole in the dyke becomes too big, the flood of appeals will cause the entire structure to collapse, swamping higher authorities.

Chapter 3: A flood of troubles

(May 3, 2009)

[quote]The new dam shines like a bright pearl,
Its power sent everywhere.
But we peasants suffered when the floods came
And washed away our land.
The prefecture issued documents on the problem,
The hydro station gave money to help us.
But corrupt, greedy officials stole the funds,
Leaving victims of the disaster mired in misery.
– Folk song for the flood victims
[/quote]

Chapter 1: Leftover problems of the Dahe Dam

(May 3, 2009)

"Since the founding of the People’s Republic of China, the state has allocated a great deal of money to build more than 10 hydropower dams in Sichuan province, and the number of affected people has now reached 224,000. For a long time, problems have lingered as a consequence of dam construction, largely due to a low standard of compensation and shortage of available land in the resettlement zones.

Top fisheries scientist wants upper Yangtze dams scrapped

(April 24, 2009) One of China’s top fisheries scientists has warned that further dam construction on the upper Yangtze will drive the region’s rare fish to extinction. Professor Cao Wenxuan, a Sichuan native and senior researcher at the Wuhan-based Institute of Hydrobiology, says government officials ‘know only how to eat the fish and don’t bother about protecting them.’ He wants the government to scrap its plans for more dams and remove those dams already under construction on the upper Yangtze.

 

Endnotes

Introduction

1. “Yao Yilin Says That for the Time Being China Will Not Consider Starting the Three Gorges Project Immediately,” Zhongguo Tongxun She, 23 January 1989.

2. Edward Goldsmith and Nicholas Hildyard, The Social and Environmental Effects of Large Dams, (San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1984), p. xi.

3. CIPM Yangtze Joint Venture (CYJV), Three Gorges Project Water Control Project Feasibility Study, Vol. 1, p. 16-12.

Chapter 12 – Economic and Financial Aspects

by Vijay Paranjpye, Ph.D.

The feasibility study of the Three Gorges Project was conducted by the CIPM Yangtze Joint Venture (CYJV) with the principal objective of providing impartial technical input to the Government of China in its decision-making process, and to provide the basis for securing funding from international financing institutions. In the study summary, CYJV states its objective as: