Last-ditch effort to save Mekong fish as dam-building continues in China, Laos (2024)

Mekong River’s declining fish species an ‘urgent wake-up call’ for action, conservationists say

Conservationists have suggested a last-ditch recovery plan to save the “irreplaceable” biodiversity of the Mekong River, as unrelenting dam-building through China and Laos disrupts sediment flow and fish-breeding patterns crucial to keeping scores of endangered fish species from extinction.

The economic value of the Mekong’s fisheries – on which 40 million people depend as it winds more than 4,900km from its source in China into the Vietnam Delta – has also plunged as development decimates the river ecosystem, according to a recent report released by some two dozen conservation organisations led by the non-governmental organisation WWF.

A total of 74 fish species are listed as endangered in the “Mekong’s Forgotten Fisheries and Emergency Plan to Save Them” study. There are 18 fish species in the critically endangered Red List, including the giant catfish and the giant freshwater stingray – the world’s two largest freshwater fish – as well the climbing perch, anabas testudineus, known for its ability to leave the water and “walk” on dry land.

Last-ditch effort to save Mekong fish as dam-building continues in China, Laos (1)

“The alarming decline in fish population in the Mekong is an urgent wake-up call for action to save these extraordinary – and extraordinarily important – species, which underpin not only the region’s societies and economies but also the health of the Mekong’s ecosystem,” said WWF’s Asia-Pacific Regional Director Lan Mercado.

The sharp decline in fisheries has largely been attributed by Mekong experts to 12 Chinese dams on the Lancang (the upper Mekong), and two dams downstream in Laos – the Thai-built Xayaburi dam and the Sinohydro construction on behalf of Malaysian developer of Don Sahong, which have drastically damaged the ecosystem.

Fishers in northeastern Thailand’s Mekong provinces, who live downstream from the Xayaburi dam in neighbouring Laos, say they have lost up to 70 per cent of their catch since the hydropower project began operations in October 2019.

The empty nets have devastated many riverine communities, depriving their children of essential nutrition and protein, as well as forcing fishers to seek other employment.

Last-ditch effort to save Mekong fish as dam-building continues in China, Laos (2)

Six steps to save the river fish

WWF and its partners say governments, investors in dams and policy advisers must hammer out an agreement on saving the river species, suggesting six steps, including to protect free-flowing rivers, restore critical habits such as floodplains and to end the unsustainable management of resources, especially sand-mining.

Experts blame the fast-tracked change to the habitat of fish species, which have evolved in the river system over millennia, on the dams which cascade down the river system, starting with 12 Chinese dams operating on the upper Mekong and two more dams currently in operation downstream in Laos.

“Research has clearly shown hydropower dams have been the primary reason for the loss of free-flowing rivers,” Richard Friend, Associate Professor at the University of York in England, told This Week in Asia.

‘The biggest threat is hydropower’: 1 in 5 Mekong fish species face extinction

Hydropower projects break up the flow of the river, hampering the movement of the vital sediment which nourishes the river and surrounding areas, as well as trapping migratory fish species behind the walls of the dam, despite efforts by dam-builders to design breakthrough “fish-ladders” to allow them to pass.

Economic data from the Fisheries Department of the Mekong River Commission (MRC) shows annual fish catch of the four lower Mekong countries of Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam, was valued at US$11 billion back in 2015. That slumped by US$3 billion within five years from the depletion of fish stocks.

While the MRC holds regular talks with dam developers, stakeholders from fishing communities and conservation groups are rarely invited to the table.

“It is significant that fishermen have been excluded, and the MRC has never consulted them,” said Friend, who was also a former consultant to the MRC. The fish emergency recovery blueprint also calls for inclusive planning, fully involving local expertise and fishing communities.

‘Transformative’: data-sharing for Southeast Asia’s longest river set to begin

The Communist government of landlocked Laos, which has vowed to uplift the nation’s economy in part by becoming the “Battery of Asia”, is wedded to major hydropower plans to be developed by Thai, Chinese and South Korean companies.

But questions over the demand for the electricity produced are mounting.

Already Thailand is buying electricity from the Xayaburi dam in Laos, and will be the main customer for seven more scheduled dams in the pipeline that pose a huge obstacle to implementing any new plan for fisheries conservation

“Thailand has a massive oversupply of electricity, with a reserve margin of 45 per cent in 2023,” said Gary Lee, Mekong region coordinator for International Rivers. “The key driver is not energy demand and security, but rather generating profits for a few at the expense of the many Mekong communities that depend on the river.”

It’s not too late to restore the Mekong, and bring its fishes back from the brink

In the case of the Luang Prabang dam currently under construction, the Laos government has rejected a recommendation from UN experts to stop the dam construction as it may endanger the Unesco World Heritage site and the protected riverside.

The MRC has no regulatory powers, and no veto power among the member states who have differing economic priorities despite sharing the river resource. Yet, in the absence of another body to steward the health of the river, the MRC’s critics urge a more front-footed approach to defending the environment rather than easing the way for developers.

“Dams are not really sustainable. It is long overdue for the MRC to employ its own publicly-funded science to question the discourse of sustainable hydropower,” Philip Hirsch, a Mekong specialist and emeritus professor at Sydney University, told This Week in Asia.

Last-ditch effort to save Mekong fish as dam-building continues in China, Laos (3)

Cambodia may be a bright spot, campaigners say, after it rejected two major dam projects along its stretch of the Mekong from the Laos border to its Kratie province under a 2020 declaration of a moratorium on dam-building.

Conservationists have commended Cambodia’s decision to protect a globally important biodiversity zone, which hosts some 80 Irrawaddy dolphins and 41 critically endangered species.

“The good news is that it’s not too late to restore the Mekong, and bring its fishes back from the brink,” said Zeb Hogan, a fish biologist, explorer and lead researcher of the Wonders of the Mekong research project, which funded the report.

But the lack of urgency from the international community has alarmed researchers, who say time is fast running out to maintain a healthy river.

“Imagine the protests if rice paddies that had been feeding 40 million people were disappearing! I guess that’s part of the problem for decision-makers,” said Richard Lee, WWF’s communications lead on Freshwater Fisheries. “The Mekong’s fisheries are irreplaceable. Isn’t it time there was a local, regional and global outcry about the Mekong’s disappearing fisheries?”

Last-ditch effort to save Mekong fish as dam-building continues in China, Laos (4)

Last-ditch effort to save Mekong fish as dam-building continues in China, Laos (2024)

FAQs

Is China's dam building harming the Mekong River? ›

The first complete year of Mekong Dam Monitor data indicated that hydropower dams have “inexorably” altered the river's natural flow, with large dams compounding water shortages in downstream parts of the basin during some of the worst drought years in recorded history between 2019 and 2021, according to an analysis ...

How many dams has China built on the Mekong? ›

Its two largest Mekong dams (Xiaowan and Nuozhadu) can store much more water than all the other 53 dams that the Mekong Dam Monitor tracks. (The 53 are the biggest among the 430 dams in the entirety of the Mekong, most of which are tiny.)

Why is Vietnam against dam development on the Mekong in Laos? ›

Due to concerns about environmental impacts on its Mekong Delta, Vietnam has long protested Laos' plans to build at least nine major hydropower dams along the river.

What is China doing to the Mekong River? ›

In 2020, China's dams removed "as much water" as possible and withheld 10% of the water from the Mekong, reducing the flow of the river downstream during the wet season, said Eyler.

Why is China building so many dams? ›

Because in the northern China, the water shortage mostly comes in winter, and there are floods in summer. So people use dam to block those floods in summer, and store those water to deal with water shortage in winter.

What countries besides China use the Mekong River? ›

The Mekong River is the longest river in Southeast Asia. The river has a length of approximately 4,900 km, flowing from its source on the Tibetan Plateau in China through Myanmar, Lao PDR, Thailand, Cambodia and Viet Nam via a large delta into the sea.

How many people will be effected by building the Mekong dam? ›

"You put all of that together, and putting a large dam in the Mekong is likely to cause major problems." International Rivers estimates that about 2,100 people would be forced to resettle if the Xayaburi Dam were built and that the livelihoods of another 200,000 people could be impacted directly.

What are the effects of Chinese dams on water flows in the lower Mekong Basin? ›

Hydropower dams have had a dramatic effect on the Mekong river over the last two decades, resulting in unseasonable flooding and droughts, low water levels in the dry season, and drops in the amounts of sediment carried by the river, with drastic consequences for biodiversity and fisheries.

What is the problem with the Mekong? ›

Beyond economic and political issues, the Mekong region faces transnational challenges that include badly managed hydropower development and the impact of climate change and rapid environmental deterioration. Mekong countries have pledged to transition to greener practices, but their actions must go beyond mere words.

Why is the Mekong River dying? ›

Unprecedented social and economic development in the Greater Mekong makes conservation work here especially urgent and significant. The most pressing threats are hydropower development, climate change, illegal wildlife trade and habitat loss.

Why did the Laos dam collapse? ›

"Faulty Construction, Heavy Rain Cause Dam to Flood Lao Villages". Radio Free Asia. Retrieved 24 July 2018.

How China is choking the Mekong? ›

Across the lower Mekong's tributaries, more than 100 dams are already up and running in Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, and Laos, and hundreds more have been proposed. Coupled with the changing climate, these dams are causing water levels in the Mekong to plummet. As the Mekong dips, so do its tributaries.

What country controls the Mekong River? ›

The Mekong river is one of the longest rivers in the world, flowing from Tibet where it collects melting snow from the Himalayas in China, through Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam.

What is the biggest threat to the Mekong River? ›

But the biggest threats are hydropower dams on the Mekong and its tributaries. These dams can dramatically affect the river in a few fundamental ways: First, they shift the flow of water, which disrupts the migratory patterns of the river's fish and destroys spawning grounds.

Are dams on the Mekong having devastating effects? ›

By disrupting fish migration and spawning, the new dams are expected to threaten the food supply of an estimated 60 million people—most of whom live in villages much like Ban Pak Ing. The electric power generated by the lower Mekong dams is destined largely for booming urban centers in Thailand and Vietnam.

What is a negative impact of the Three Gorges Dam in China? ›

The Three Gorges Dam project threatens many endangered species that are native to the Yangtze River. The baiji dolphin, the ancient river sturgeon and the finless porpoise depend on the Yangtze for their survival. The population of Siberian cranes in Poyang Lake will also be affected by the dam.

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