Chinese hydropower lobbyists are calling for construction of the world’s biggest dam on the upper reaches of the Brahmaputra river as part of a huge expansion of hydropower in the Himalayas.
Zhang Boting (張博庭), the deputy general secretary of the China Society for Hydropower Engineering, said that a dam on the great bend of the Yarlung Tsangpo — the Tibetan name for the river — would benefit the world, despite the likely concerns of downstream nations, India and Bangladesh, which access water and power from the river.
Zhang said research had been carried out on the project, but no plan has been drawn up. But documents on the Web site of a government agency suggest a 38 gigawatt hydropower plant is under consideration that would be more than half as big again as the Three Gorges dam, with a capacity nearly half as large as the UK’s national grid.
“This dam could save 200 million tonnes of carbon each year. We should not waste the opportunity of the biggest carbon emission reduction project. For the sake of the entire world, all the water resources than can be developed should be developed,” he said.
That carbon dioxide saving would be over a third of the UK’s entire emissions.
The mega-facility is among more than 28 dams on the river that are either planned, completed or under discussion by China, according to Tashi Tsering, a Tibetan scholar of environmental policy at the University of British Columbia.
He believes that the Tsangpo-Brahmaputra — until recently considered the last great undammed river in Tibet — will be the next focus of government efforts to increase the nation’s power supply. The government has not confirmed the existence of the scheme, but Tsering cites several newspaper reports of survey teams exploring the area and provides links to other online documents that indicate preparations for large-scale hydro-development of the area.
Given the huge expense, technical difficulties and political sensitivities of the scheme, it is far from certain of final approval by the government. But several Chinese hydroengineers see it as the ultimate goal in an accelerating race with India to develop water resources in one of the planet’s last remote regions.
Tapping the power of the river as it bends and plunges from the Himalayan roof of the world down towards the Indian and Bangladeshi flood plains has long been a dream of the world’s hydro-engineers.
Along with the Congo river at the Inga falls, this is considered one of the two greatest concentrations of river energy on earth, but it was long thought impossible to access because of the rugged, high-altitude terrain and the risk of water-related conflict with neighboring countries.
But China has overcome many engineering obstacles with the construction of the railway to Tibet, and its growing energy demands are spurring exploration of ever more remote areas.
“Tibet’s resources will be converted into economic advantage,” China Hydropower Engineering Consulting Group general manager Yan Zhiyong (晏志勇) told China Energy News earlier this year. “The major technical constraints on damming the Yarlung Tsampo have been overcome.”
He declined the Guardian’s request for an interview, saying the subject was too sensitive.
The exploitation of the Brahmaputra is already under way. China recently announced plans to build five dams further upstream, including a 500MW hydroplant at Zangmu, which is under construction by the power utility Huaneng.
According to Tsering, the biggest of them will be a huge plant at the great bend — either at Metog, known as Motuo in Chinese, or at Daduqia. The former would involve the construction of a series of tunnels, pipes, reservoirs and turbines to exploit the spectacular 2,000m fall of the river as it curls down toward India.
Although there has been no official confirmation of plans for a dam, the discussion is far from secret. On a prominent Chinese science forum, Zhang said a dam on the great bend was the ultimate hope for water resource exploitation because it could generate energy equivalent to 100 million tonnes of crude coal, or all the oil and gas in the South China sea.
He warned that a delay would allow India to tap these resources and prompt “major conflict” in a region where the two nations have sporadically clashed over disputed territory.
“We should build a hydropower plant in Motuo ... as soon as possible because it is a great policy to protect our territory from Indian invasion and to increase China’s capacity for carbon reduction,” he wrote last year
Any step forward is likely to be controversial. Tibetans consider Metog a sacred region, and environmental activists warn against building such a huge project in a seismically active and ecologically fragile area.
“A large dam on the Tibetan plateau would amount to a major, irreversible experiment with geo-engineering,” Peter Bossard of International Rivers said. “Blocking the Yarlung Tsangpo could devastate the fragile ecosystem of the Tibetan plateau, and would withhold the river’s sediments from the fertile floodplains of Assam in northeast India, and Bangladesh.”
China’s construction of dams also raises the prospect of a race with India to develop hydropower along South Asia’s most important river.
“India needs to be more aggressive in pushing ahead hydro projects [on the Brahmaputra],” Indian Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said during a recent visit to Beijing. “That would put us in better negotiating position [with China].”
To minimize the risk of water-related conflict, the two nations have agreed to share information about hydro-plans on the Tsangpo-Brahmaputra.
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