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	<title>Tibet Hydropower dam &#8211; Mazzaltov World News</title>
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		<title>China: Beijing to build world&#8217;s largest hydropower dam in Tibet</title>
		<link>https://news.mazzaltov.com/china-beijing-to-build-worlds-largest-hydropower-dam-in-tibet/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=china-beijing-to-build-worlds-largest-hydropower-dam-in-tibet</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Loneson Mondo]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Dec 2024 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Asia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[China]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tibet Hydropower dam]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://news.mazzaltov.com/?p=19896</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[China has approved the construction of what will be the world&#8217;s largest hydropower dam, stoking concerns about displacement of communities in Tibet and environmental impacts downstream in India and Bangladesh.&#8230; ]]></description>
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<p class="">China has approved the construction of what will be the world&#8217;s largest hydropower dam, stoking concerns about displacement of communities in Tibet and environmental impacts downstream in India and Bangladesh.</p>



<p class="">The dam, which will be located in the lower reaches of the Yarlung Tsangpo river, could generate three times more energy than the Three Gorges Dam, currently the world&#8217;s largest hydropower plant.</p>



<p class="">Chinese state media has described the development as &#8220;a safe project that prioritises ecological protection&#8221;, saying it will boost local prosperity and contribute to Beijing&#8217;s climate neutrality goals.</p>



<p class="">Human rights groups and experts, however, have raised concerns about the development&#8217;s knock-on effects.</p>



<p class="">Among them are fears that the construction of the dam &#8211; first announced in late-2020 &#8211; could displace local communities, as well as significantly alter the natural landscape and damage local ecosystems, which are among the richest and most diverse on the Tibetan Plateau.</p>



<p class="">China has built several dams in Tibetan areas &#8211; a contentious subject in a region tightly controlled by Beijing ever since it was annexed in the 1950s.</p>



<p class=""> Bejing said it had relocated and compensated locals, and moved the anicent murals to safety.</p>



<p class="">In the case of the Yarlung Tsangpo dam, Chinese authorities have stressed that the project would not have major environmental impact &#8211; but they have not indicated how many people it would displace. The Three Gorges hydropower dam required the resettlement of 1.4 million people.</p>



<p class="">Reports indicate that the colossal development would require at least four 20km-long tunnels to be drilled through the Namcha Barwa mountain, diverting the flow of the Yarlung Tsangpo, Tibet&#8217;s longest river.</p>



<p class="">Experts and officials have also flagged concerns that the dam would empower China to control or divert the flow of the trans-border river, which flows south into India&#8217;s Arunachal Pradesh and Assam states and onwards into Bangladesh.</p>



<p class="">A 2013 report published by the Lowy Institute, an Australian-based think tank, noted that &#8220;control over these rivers [in the Tibetan Plateau] effectively gives China a chokehold on India&#8217;s economy&#8221;.</p>



<p class="">Shortly after China announced its plans for the Yarlung Tsangpo dam project in 2020, a senior Indian government official told Reuters that India&#8217;s government was exploring the development of a large hydropower dam and reservoir &#8220;to mitigate the adverse impact of the Chinese dam projects&#8221;.</p>



<p class="">China&#8217;s foreign ministry has previously responded to India&#8217;s concerns around the proposed dam, saying in 2020 that China has a &#8220;legitimate right&#8221; to dam the river and has considered downstream impacts.</p>



<p class="">China has constructed multiple hydropower stations along the course of the Yarlung Tsangpo over the past decade in a bid to harness the river&#8217;s power as a source of renewable energy. Flowing through the deepest canyon on Earth, one section of the river falls 2,000 metres within a short span of just 50 km, offering huge potential for generating hydropower.</p>



<p class="">The river&#8217;s dramatic topography, however, also poses major engineering challenges &#8211; and this latest dam is by far China&#8217;s largest and most ambitious to date.The site of the development is located along an earthquake-prone tectonic plate boundary. </p>



<p class="">Chinese researchers have also previously flagged concerns that such extensive excavation and construction in the steep and narrow gorge would increase the frequency of landslides.</p>



<p class="">&#8220;Earthquake-induced landslides and mud-rock flows are often uncontrollable and will also pose a huge threat to the project,&#8221; a senior engineer from Sichuan provincial geological bureau said in 2022.</p>



<p class="">The project could cost as much as a trillion yuan ($127bn; £109.3bn) according to estimates by the Chongyi Water Resources bureau.</p>
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