Laos:
Norwegian and Chinese “aid” helps dam the Xeset River
Late last year, Norconsult,
a Norwegian consulting firm, won a US$1.5 million contract to
supervise construction work of the Xeset 2 dam in the south of
Laos. Norconsult won the contract, which is funded by the Norwegian
Agency for Development Cooperation (Norad), without any competitive
bidding.
Norconsult has plenty of experience
of working on the Xeset River, having worked on the planning and
construction of the 45 MW Xeset 1 dam, which was completed in
1991, with funding from Sweden, Norway, the Asian Development
Bank and UNDP. During the dry season, the Xeset 1 dam produces
virtually no electricity, because of the low water flow in the
Xeset River.
Eight years after Xeset 1 was
completed, Norconsult was hired again to carry out a feasibility
study for the Xeset 2 and Xeset 3 dams. Norad provided US$1.8
million towards the cost of the study. The Xeset 2 and Xeset 3
dams are upstream of the Xeset 1 dam and by transferring water
from nearby rivers into the Xeset River, will increase the amount
of water flowing through the turbines of the Xeset 1 dam. As with
the Xeset 1 dam, most of the electricity from the 76 MW Xeset
2 dam is to be exported to Thailand.
Building more dams to attempt
to solve problems with existing dams is obviously an attractive
proposition to a dam building consulting firm such as Norconsult.
But more dams means more rivers and fisheries destroyed and more
local people's livelihoods destroyed.
Two years ago, Phetsavanh Sayaboulaven
carried out a series of interviews with villagers in the area
of the Xeset 2 dam. Almost all the people living in the area are
indigenous, mainly belonging to the Jru (Laven) and Kouay ethnic
groups. One villager told Phetsavanh, "We do not want them
to build the dam. It will badly affect our land and the environment.
The official compensation will not be adequate, just like in the
case of the Houay Ho dam. But we dare not oppose government officials."
China plays a major role in
the Xeset 2 dam. The Import-Export Bank of China is funding 80
per cent of the US$135 million project with the remainder coming
from Electricité du Lao. The main contractor is the China North
Industries Corporation (Norinco), a company better known as a
major armaments manufacturer than as a builder of dams. Construction
of the Xeset 2 dam is under way and completion is due in 2009.
When Norinco started building
the dam, villagers started stealing. Iron bars, roofing tiles
and large amounts of petrol disappeared from the construction
site. Some villagers became rich very quickly. The theft could
be seen as a form of resistance to the dam – or an attempt by
villagers to make sure they would at least get some compensation.
Lao people working for the Chinese construction firm helped villagers
to steal petrol. Firing Lao workers made no difference because
the people hired to replace them also helped the thieves. Things
turned violent when villagers killed a Chinese worker who tried
to stop them from stealing petrol.
Probably in an attempt to cool
down the situation at the construction site, the Lao government
made sure that villagers received some compensation. Recent research
in Laos indicates that villagers in the immediate area of the
construction site have received a total of about US$150,000 in
compensation for lost land and lost coffee plants.
But villagers so far unaffected
by the construction activities have not received anything. More
than 12,500 villagers living along the Tapoung River will face
seriously reduced water flows when water is diverted to the Xeset
2 reservoir. These villagers do not know whether they will receive
any compensation or how it will be calculated if they do.
Villagers use water from the
Tapoung River for dry season rice cultivation. They farm the riverbanks
and land next to the river, growing a wide range of crops. Many
wild plants grow along the Tapoung River, including edible plants
and medicinal plants. Fish, shrimp, crabs and snails are an important
source of protein for local people. The river also provides the
main source of drinking water for many villages during the dry
season. “If they build the dam and stop the water from flowing
in this river, I will be very sad,” an old woman told Phetsavanh.
“The river has been feeding me since childhood and into my old
age.”
When Norconsult decided, in
1999, that the Xeset 2 and 3 dams were feasible, its consultants
knew that their company stood to benefit through future contracts
from this decision. Norconsult's decision was challenged four
years later when an Asian Development Bank-funded study determined
that the Xeset 2 and 3 dams were “not viable”. Norconsult declined
to comment when I asked how come its consultants reached the opposite
conclusion.
The perverse situation on the
Boloven Plateau is that a Norwegian consulting firm is benefiting
from Norwegian “aid”, a Chinese construction firm is benefiting
from Chinese “aid”, and Lao villagers are left to pay the costs
of destroyed rivers and livelihoods.
By Chris Lang, e-mail: http://chrislang.org,
http://chrislang.org