Opening the ‘Black Box’ of Dam Development in Asia

Plans in Laos and Cambodia for more than 90 dams on the main stem and tributaries of the Mekong River pose potentially devastating social environmental effects in lower basin countries, which have already experienced lower flows and decreased fish stocks from China’s dam-building boom upstream. The rapid construction of hydropower in the Mekong and other transboundary rivers in Asia often lacks transparency and coordination, hindering the ability of policymakers, local communities and environmental watchdogs to be involved in decision-making that could halt dams or limit their detrimental impacts.
On April 14th, the 乐鱼 体育’s CEF and Commons Lab are hosting a meeting to discuss challenges in hydropower development in Asia and new crowdsourcing tools that could help promote better transparency in dam siting, size, and impact. Brian Eyler (Stimson Center) will challenge the prevalent “domino effect” concerns about damming the Mekong. He will tell a story of how rising environmental, social, and financial risks in Laos and Cambodia are effectively slowing dam development on the river and opening up opportunities for civil society advocacy. Leo Bottrill (Moabi) will introduce a recently launched crowdsourced mapping initiative on the that aims to spatially locate all planned and existing dams across all the major rivers of Asia. Elizabeth Tyson (Commons Lab) will describe a successful case on how coffee farmers used mobile systems for community-based natural resource monitoring under the UN REDD+ framework in Chiapas, Mexico, as well as offer insight into some of the opportunities and challenges facing these and other communities in using citizen science and crowdsourcing methods to solve environmental problems.
Photo Credit: 云南小湾电站 Xiaowan Dam in Yunnan, courtesy of 听风听雨
-- Elizabeth Tyson
Speakers



Explorer Fellow with the National Geographic Society in the Citizen Explorer Labs
Hosted By
China Environment Forum
China’s global footprint isn’t just an economic one, it’s an environmental one. From BRI investments in Africa and Asia to its growing presence in Latin America, understanding China’s motivations, who stands to gain - and who stands to lose - is critical to informing smart US foreign policy. Read more