Damming Rivers Is Terrible for Human Rights, Ecosystems, and Food Security

International Rivers

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Damming Rivers Is Terrible for Human Rights, Ecosystems, and Food Security

Human Rights February 24, 2021

By: Deborah Moore, International Rivers Board Member Darryl Knudsen, Executive Director Michael Simon, former Senior Director of Strategy

This article was originally featured on Truthout

There’s some good news amid the grim global pandemic: At long last, the world’s largest dam removal is finally happening.

The landmark agreement, which was finalized in November 2020 between farmers, tribes and dam owners, will finally bring down four aging, inefficient dams along the Klamath River in the Pacific Northwest. This is an important step in restoring historic salmon runs, which have drastically declined in recent years since the dams were constructed. It’s also an incredible win for the Karuk and Yurok tribes, who for untold generations have relied on the salmon runs for both sustenance and spiritual well-being.

Xikrin Kayapo leaders in Altamira |Photo by: Atossa Soltani / Amazon Watch

The tribes, supported by environmental activists, led a decades-long effort to broker an agreement. They faced vehement opposition from some farmers and owners of lakeside properties, but in 2010, they managed what had seemed impossible: PacifiCorp, the operator of the dams, signed a dam removal agreement, along with 40 other signatories that included the tribes and the state governments of Oregon and California. Unfortunately, progress stalled for years when questions arose around who would pay for the dam removals.

The dam removal project is a sign of the decline of the hydropower industry, whose fortunes have fallen as the troubling cost-benefit ratio of dams has become clear over the years. The rise of more cost-effective and sustainable energy sources (including wind and solar) has hastened this shift.

This is exactly the type of progress envisioned by the World Commission on Dams (WCD), a global multi-stakeholder body that was established by the World Bank and International Union for Conservation of Nature in 1998 to investigate the effectiveness and performance of large dams around the world. The WCD released a damning landmark report in November 2000 on the enormous financial, environmental and human costs and the dismal performance of large dams. The commission spent two years analyzing the outcome of the trillions of dollars invested in dams, reviewing dozens of case studies and testimonies from over a thousand communities and individuals, before producing the report.

But despite this progress, we cannot take hydropower’s decline as inevitable. As governments around the world plan for a post-pandemic recovery, hydropower companies sense an opportunity. The industry is eager to recast itself as climate-friendly (it’s not) and secure precious stimulus funds to revive its dying industry — at the expense of people, the environment and a truly just, green recovery.

Hydropower’s Troubling Record

The world’s largest hydropower dam removal project on the Klamath River is a significant win for tribal communities. But while the Yurok and Karuk tribes suffered terribly from the decline of the Klamath’s fisheries, they were by no means alone in that experience. The environmental catastrophe that occurred along the Klamath River has been replicated all over the world since the global boom in hydropower construction began early in the 20th century.

A fish catch at the Siphandone on the Mekong River prior to the completion of the Don Sahong Dam. | Photo by Pai Deetes, International Rivers

The rush to dam rivers has had huge consequences. After decades of rampant construction, only 37 percent of the world’s rivers remain free-flowing, according to one study. River fragmentation has decimated freshwater habitats and fish stocks, threatening food security for millions of the world’s most vulnerable people, and hastening the decline of other myriad freshwater species, including mammals, birds and reptiles.

The communities that experienced the most harm from dams — whether in Asia, Latin America or Africa — often lacked political power and access. But that didn’t stop grassroots movements from organizing and growing to fight for their rights and livelihoods. The people affected by dams began raising their voices, sharing their experiences and forging alliances across borders. By the 1990s, the public outcry against large dams had grown so loud that it finally led to the establishment of the WCD.

What the WCD found was stunning. While large dam projects had brought some economic benefits, they had also forcibly displaced an estimated 40 to 80 million people in the 20th century alone. To put that number into perspective, it is more than the current population of present-day France or the United Kingdom. These people lost their lands and homes to dams, and often with no compensation.

Subsequent research has compounded that finding. A paper published in Water Alternatives revealed that globally, more than 470 million people living downstream from large dams have faced significant impacts to their lives and livelihoods — much of it due to disruptions in water supply, which in turn harm the complex web of life that depends on healthy, free-flowing rivers. The WCD’s findings, released in 2000, identified the importance of restoring rivers, compensating communities for their losses, and finding better energy alternatives to save rivers and ecosystems.

Facing a New Crisis

Twenty years after the WCD uncovered a crisis along the world’s rivers and recommended a new development path — one that advanced community-driven development and protects freshwater resources — we find ourselves in the midst of another crisis. The global pandemic has hit us hard, with surging loss of life, unemployment and instability.

But as governments work to rebuild economies and create job opportunities in the coming years, we have a choice: Double down on the failed, outdated technologies that have harmed so many, or change course and use this transformative moment to rebuild our natural systems and uplift communities.

There are many reasons to fight for a green recovery. The climate is changing even faster than expected, and some dams — especially those with reservoirs in hot climates — have been found to emit more greenhouse gases than a fossil fuel power plant. Other estimates have put global reservoirs’ human-made greenhouse gas emissions each year on par with Canada’s total emissions.

Meanwhile, we now understand that healthy rivers and freshwater ecosystems play a critical role in regulating and storing carbon. And at a time when biodiversity loss is soaring, anything we can do to restore habitat is key. But with more than 3,700 major dams proposed or under construction in the world (primarily in the Global South, with over 500 of these in protected areas), according to a 2014 report — and the hydropower industry jockeying for scarce stimulus dollars — we must act urgently.

Signs of Hope

So what would a strong, resilient and equitable recovery look like in the 21st century? Let’s consider one example in Southeast Asia.

Running through six countries, the Mekong River is the world’s 12th-longest river and is home to one of the world’s most biodiverse regions and the world’s largest inland fishery. Around 80 percent of the nearly 65 million people who live in the Lower Mekong River Basin depend on the river for their livelihoods, according to the Mekong River Commission. In 1994, Thailand built the Pak Mun Dam on a Mekong tributary. Six years later, the WCD studied the dam’s performance and submitted its conclusions and recommendations as part of its final report in 2000. According to the WCD report, the Pak Mun Dam did not deliver the peaking energy service it was designed for, and it physically blocked a critical migration route for a range of fish species that migrated annually to breeding grounds upstream in the Mun River Basin. Cut off from their customary habitat, fish stocks plummeted, and so did the livelihoods of the local people.

Neighboring Laos, instead of learning from this debacle, followed in Thailand’s footsteps, constructing two dams on the river’s mainstem, Xayaburi Dam, commissioned in 2019, and Don Sahong Dam, commissioned in 2020. But then a sign of hope appeared. In early 2020, just as the pandemic began to spread across the world, the Cambodian government reconsidered its plans to build more dams on the Mekong. The science was indisputable: A government-commissioned report showed that further dams would reduce the river’s wild fisheries, threaten critically endangered Irrawaddy dolphins and would block nutrient-rich sediment from the delta’s fertile agricultural lands.

Studies show that Cambodia didn’t need to seek billions of dollars in loans to build more hydropower; instead, it could pursue more cost-effective solar and wind projects that would deliver needed electricity at a fraction of the cost — and without the ecological disasters to fisheries and the verdant Mekong delta. And, in a stunning reversal, Cambodia listened to the science — and to the people — and announced a 10-year moratorium on mainstream dams. Cambodia is now reconsidering its energy mix, recognizing that mainstream hydropower dams are too costly and undermine the economic and cultural values of its flagship river.

Toward a Green Recovery

Increasingly, governments, civil servants and the public at large are rethinking how we produce energy and are seeking to preserve and restore precious freshwater resources. Dam removals are increasing exponentially across North America and Europe, and movements advancing permanent river protection are growing across Latin America, Asia and Africa.

Karen organizer speaking out to keep the Salween River free flowing, International Day of Action for Rivers | Photo by Photos by Wichai Juntavaro

We must use the COVID-19 crisis to accelerate the trend. Rather than relying on old destructive technologies and industry claims of new-found “sustainable hydropower,” the world requires a new paradigm for an economic recovery that is rooted both in climate and economic justice as well as river stewardship. Since December 2020, hundreds of groups and individuals from more than 80 countries have joined the Rivers4Recovery call for a better way forward for rivers and natural places. This paradigm will protect our rivers as critical lifelines — supporting fisheries, biodiversity, water supply, food production, Indigenous peoples and diverse populations around the world — rather than damming and polluting them.

The promise of the Klamath dam removals is one of restoration — a move that finally recognizes the immense value of free-flowing rivers and the key role they play in nourishing both the world’s biodiversity and hundreds of millions of people.

Healthy rivers — connected to watershed forests, floodplains, wetlands and deltas — are key partners in building resilience in the face of an accelerating climate crisis. But if we allow the hydropower industry to succeed in its cynical grab for stimulus funds, we’ll only perpetuate the 20th century’s legacy of suffering and environmental degradation.

We must put our money where our values are. Twenty years ago, the WCD pointed the way forward to a model of development that takes humans, wildlife and the environment into account, and in 2020, we saw that vision flower along the Klamath River. It’s time to bring that promise of healing and restoration to more of the world’s rivers.

This article was produced by Earth | Food | Life, a project of the Independent Media Institute.

Featured Image: Arundhati Roy and Medha Patkar protest against dams on India’s Narmada River | Photo by International Rivers

Para la humanidad “los derechos de la madre tierra” suponen ponerse “encima de ella”: Óscar Olivera, defensor ambiental

16 diciembre, 2020 Eric Sandoval

Medio ambiente | Zona de notas

“¿Quién le puede dar derechos a una Madre Tierra si nosotros somos sus hijos?”: Óscar Olivera, defensor ambiental.

Óscar Olivera Foronda, activista y miembro de la Fundación Abril y Red Vida en Bolivia invita a reflexionar sobre cómo son percibidos los llamados “derechos de la naturaleza”, y cómo es que nosotros y nosotras como habitantes de la tierra los empleamos. 

Por Eric Sandoval / @eric20san

“Cuando se habla de derechos a la madre tierra, me pone a reflexionar si nosotros como raza humana estamos permitidos darle derechos a la madre tierra, cuando ella es la que nos da permanente vida, ¿quién le puede dar derechos a una madre tierra si nosotros somos sus hijos?”, relató Óscar Olivera, quien fue parte de la lucha por la desprivatización del agua en Cochabamba, Bolivia en el año 2000 y sigue estando en resistencia bajo la consigna: “el pueblo puede vencer a los más poderosos”.

A pesar de que los gobiernos se esfuerzan por dotar de derechos a la Madre Tierra, a través de leyes y otros instrumentos reguladores, esto representa también un acto de perspectiva occidental del derecho, dijo Olivera Foronda, en el marco de la “Jornada de Celebración y Acción: Por Ríos Libres de Represas, Tóxicos y Extractivismo”, un evento organizado por el Comité Salvemos Temacapulín, Acasico y Palmarejo; Movimiento Mexicano de Afectadxs por las Presas y en Defensa de los Ríos (MAPDER); Instituto Mexicano Para el Desarrollo Comunitario (IMDEC) y Colectivo de Abogadxs.

“Quien tiene derechos, tiene obligaciones, ¿qué obligación tiene la madre tierra con nosotros?, ninguna”, afirmó el defensor. Cuidarla, apreciarla, agradecer y mimarla como una madre, invitó Óscar, ya que en ella construimos nuestros hogares, escuelas, centros recreativos, además de que nos ofrece alimentos que se forman dentro de ella.

“Los derechos de la madre suponen ponerme encima de mi mamá”, mencionó Óscar.

En ese sentido, el activista también mencionó que la privatización significa la destrucción de nuestra memoria e historia, lo que es el factor más importante para que las nuevas generaciones puedan continuar con la lucha. Así mismo, Olivera Foronda mencionó la importancia de cuestionar el derecho humano al agua, ya que con ese precedente, se excluye el derecho que tienen todos los seres vivos al agua e, incluso, a la misma Madre Tierra.

“La llegada de la cotización del agua en la bolsa de valores de Wall Street representa una visión capitalista y mercantilista de algo que debe ser un bien común”, dijo Óscar.

Finalmente, mencionó que hacer justicia mediante vías legales y legítimas siempre será un gran paso, pero la solución siempre debe nacer en la movilización del pueblo ante una institucionalidad nefasta y contraria.

Eric Sandoval Más tapatío que la torta ahogada. Serio y comprometido con las distintas luchas sociales y con su labor periodística. Cubre conflictos ambientales, movimientos urbanos y personas desaparecidas. Ganador del Premio Jalisco de Periodismo 2019.

‘Ríos para la vida, 10 años después…’

El Siglo de Torreón

JULIO CÉSAR RAMÍREZ

sábado 12 de diciembre 2020, actualizada 8:44 am


Tres días de la semana que termina fueron jornadas de celebración y acción por ríos libres de represas, tóxicos y extractivismo. Un emotivo reencuentro mundial, dinamizado desde México, de defensoras y defensores de ríos, territorios y sus comunidades, víctimas invisibles de la crisis global del agua. A 10 años del tercer encuentro internacional de afectados por las presas y sus aliados -conocido como Ríos para la vida 3-, que se realizó en octubre del 2010 en el hermoso pueblo de Temacapulín, en Los Altos de Jalisco -amenazado de inundación por la construcción de la presa El Zapotillo, hoy detenida-, se festejaron las victorias de los pueblos, a los ríos, pero también se identificaron nuevos retos y desafíos locales, regionales y planetarios, reflexionados en la reunión, ahora virtual, «Ríos para la vida, 10 años después».

La Comisión Mundial de Presas estima que las 45,000 grandes presas construidas en el siglo XX provocaron el desplazamiento de entre 40 y 80 millones de personas. La privatización de los servicios de agua y saneamiento por la presión del Banco Mundial ha transformado a los ciudadanos en clientes, ignorando que el acceso al agua potable debe ser garantizado como derecho humano. Padece el planeta un verdadero holocausto hidrológico en el que las víctimas parecen lejanas y sin rostro, prescindibles en nuestra conciencia. El tercer encuentro de afectados y afectadas por represas, reunió en 2010 a 350 delegaciones de esas personas provenientes de 64 países, víctimas y luchadores por un mundo más justo, digno y sostenible, en una comunidad mexicana símbolo de festiva resistencia: Temacapulín, cariñosamente llamado Temaca.

Diez años después, el piso de esta resistencia mundial es la Declaración de Temaca, emitida en 2010, vigente en 2020 con algunos ajustes. La primera gran estación será el 14 de marzo del 2021, día de acción internacional contra represas y por el agua, la vida y las comunidades, momento en que Pedro Arrojo Agudo, Relator Especial de la ONU para los derechos humanos al agua potable y al saneamiento, lanzará una declaración global adecuada que retome los planteamientos de la Comisión Mundial de Represas, según anunció al participar en este reencuentro «Ríos para la vida, 10 años después».

Los convocantes fueron el Comité Salvemos Temaca y defensores de los ríos y el agua como MAPDER, IMDEC, COMDA, Colectivo de Abogados, REMA, International Rivers, RedLar.

En esta ocasión, el Comité Salvemos Temaca habló de la lucha contra la presa El Zapotillo. Y Gustavo Castro, de Otros Mundos Chiapas, conversó acerca del movimiento mundial de afectados por represas y en defensa de los ríos, y de la transición a energías renovables.

El Consejo de Ejidos y Comunidades Opositores a la Presa La Parota (CECOP), de Guerrero, explicó la lucha por los ríos en México.

La conversación «El hermano mayor contra la construcción de presas y en defensa de los ríos en América Latina», estuvo a cargo del Movimiento dos Atingidos por Barragens (MAB), de Brasil.

Monti Aguirre, de Ríos Internacionales, habló de la lucha por los ríos en Norteamérica y la Declaración Internacional de los Derechos de los Ríos.

Pedro Arrojo, Relator Especial de la ONU, disertó en torno del Informe sobre Grandes Infraestructuras Hidráulicas y la defensa de los ríos en Europa.

Juan Pablo Soler, del Movimiento Ríos Vivos Colombia, describió la defensa de los ríos en Sudamérica.

Guadalupe Lara relató la lucha de las mujeres en la defensa de los ríos, el caso de la presa de Arcediano, en Jalisco.

El Consejo de Pueblos Unidos en Defensa del Río Verde (Copudever), de Oaxaca, detalló la defensa de la Madre Tierra y la resistencia a la Presa Hidroeléctrica Paso de la Reina.

Servicios para una Educación Alternativa (EDUCA), de Oaxaca, habló de la fuerza de los ríos, la fuerza de los pueblos: Madre Tierra y Libre determinación.

La Asamblea Veracruzana de Iniciativas y Defensa Ambiental (Lavida), explicó la lucha contra los proyectos hidroeléctricos y el modelo extractivo en México.

El Consejo del Pueblo Maya, de Guatemala, refirió la lucha por los ríos en Centroamérica.

Tom Kucharz, de Ecologistas en Acción, España, disertó en torno al agua y la energía en los tratados comerciales de la Unión Europea y América Latina.

Berta Zúñiga, del Consejo Cívico de Organizaciones Populares e Indígenas de Honduras (COPINH), habló de la criminalización de los defensores de ríos, agua y territorio.

Continuará.

@kardenche

https://www.elsiglodetorreon.com.mx/noticia/1791928.rios-para-la-vida-10-anos-despues.html

#Rivers 4Recovery

Ríos Internacionales

Únete a nosotros y a la Coalición de Ríos sin Límites el jueves 10 12/10 am est para el seminario web #Rivers 4Recovery!

Estamos emocionados de contar con este panel mundial de oradores para hacer hincapié en la necesidad de un#just y #verdecovery de la pandemia.

Regístrate aquí: http://intlrv.rs/Rivers4RecoveryWebinar

Jornada de Celebración y Acción: «Por Ríos Libres de Represas, Tóxicos y Extractivismo» (Día 7)

Temacapulín, Jalisco

? #RíosParaLaVida | Agradecemos a quienes participaron hoy en el primer día, si te lo perdiste puedes verlo aquí:

Video segundo día Jornada de Celebración y Acción: “Por Ríos Libres de Represas, Tóxicos y Extractivismo”

Transmisión del segundo día de Jornadas de celebración y acción: Por Ríos libres de represas, tóxicos y extractivismo

Ver video en:

https://twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1ynJOBnXEBWGR

Video Primer día de la Jornada de Celebración y Acción: “Por Ríos Libres de Represas, Tóxicos y Extractivismo”

Inicio de trabajos de la Jornada de Celebración y Acción: “Por Ríos Libres de Represas, Tóxicos y Extractivismo”

Ver video en: https://www.pscp.tv/w/1eaKbnDdLMVKX

Firme la declaración: Ríos Saludables para una Recuperación Justa y Verde

Lea la declaración y firme como organización o como individuo a través de este enlace: www.rivers4recovery.org/spanish Le pedimos que también ayude a difundir la declaración y el llamamiento internacional ampliamente a través de sus redes.
 
En jueves, 10 de diciembre, planeamos realizar un evento en línea, con participación de activistas de varios lugares del mundo, para discutir y resaltar mensajes clave de la declaración y del informe. El link para registros en el zoom es: https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_gOtu_vJsToagVWI4S-5Sbw?emci=487d7beb-652f-eb11-9fb4-00155d43b2cd&emdi=b3afb5f8-6c2f-eb11-9fb4-00155d43b2cd&ceid=1947336 

Brent Millikan
Diretor, Programa Amazônia / Amazon Program Director
International Rivers - Brasil
brent@internationalrivers.org
www.internationalrivers.org


Mas informacion abajo:

Estimado(a)s colegas,

International Rivers, Rivers without Boundaries y otros socios buscan su apoyo en un llamado internacional a la recuperación económica con justicia socioambiental, con especial atención a la protección de los ríos, como se describe aquí: www.rivers4recovery.org/spanish

Este llamamiento internacional alerta sobre iniciativas de impulsar la construcción de represas hidroeléctricas destructivas como una falsa solución para la recuperación económica ante la pandemia de la COVID-19. Asimismo, ofrece alternativas para una recuperación verdaderamente verde y justa, a través de la protección de los ríos y otras soluciones basadas en la naturaleza, valorando las iniciativas comunitarias, que deben ser apoyadas por gobiernos y entes financieros.

Nuestra intención es enviar este llamamiento a patrocinadores, gobiernos y organizaciones internacionales, a través de redes sociales y la prensa convencional.
Esperamos que usted y su organización puedan unirse a nosotros y nosotras, adhiriéndose y promoviendo su difusión entre socios y socias, redes y canales de redes sociales.

Este llamamiento se basa en un informe conciso titulado: “Ríos Saludables para una Recuperación Justa y Verde:  Llamamiento mundial para la protección de los ríos y derechos de las comunidades”, tratando de la necesidad urgente de protección de los ríos y otros sistemas naturales para superar la crisis que enfrenta la sociedad, al tiempo que se destacan soluciones para la matriz energética dentro de otro paradigma de desarrollo, verdaderamente justo y sustentable.
El informe respalda el llamado mundial para una recuperación arraigada en la justicia socioambiental, que protege nuestros ríos como venas y arterias esenciales para la vida en el planeta – que sustentan la biodiversidad, el suministro de agua, la producción de alimentos y las condiciones de vida de pueblos indígenas y diversas poblaciones de todo el mundo – en contraste con su degradación por las represas y otras actividades que solo tienen como objetivo el lucro, independientemente de sus costos socioambientales.

El informe está programado para ser divulgado en línea a partir del dia 03 de diciembre.  Mientras tanto, estamos recopilando firmas para dicha declaración, que se publicará junto con el informe. Las organizaciones que firmen la declaración tendrán acceso al informe embargado, poco antes de su lanzamiento oficial.
Lea la declaración y firme como organización o como individuo a través de este enlace: www.rivers4recovery.org/spanish Le pedimos que también ayude a difundir la declaración y el llamamiento internacional ampliamente a través de sus redes.

En jueves, 10 de diciembre, planeamos realizar un evento en línea, con participación de activistas de varios lugares del mundo, para discutir y resaltar mensajes clave de la declaración y del informe. El link para registros en el zoom es: https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_gOtu_vJsToagVWI4S-5Sbw?emci=487d7beb-652f-eb11-9fb4-00155d43b2cd&emdi=b3afb5f8-6c2f-eb11-9fb4-00155d43b2cd&ceid=1947336     Esperamos contar con su participación!

Estén atentos y atentas, ¡más detalles próximamente!
Cordialmente,

International Rivers (Ríos Internacionales) y Rivers Without Boundaries (Ríos Sin Fronteras)

Seguir leyendo

Speaking up for a silenced river

International Rivers

Asia October 19, 2020

By: Ayesha DSouza, South Asia Program Coordinator & guest writer Melanie Scaife

Mayalmit Lepcha grew up listening to the sounds of the Rongyoung River, which flows past her village in Dzongu, in the Indian state of Sikkim. This tiny state lies in the heart of the Himalayas between Nepal, Bhutan and Tibet, and is a place of exceptional natural beauty. It is also home to the Indigenous Lepcha people, who have lived here for centuries.

“In our culture, in our tradition, in our rituals, we recite the name of this river, the river Rongyoung, a tributary of the Teesta, which originates from Mount Kanchenjunga,” Mayalmit explains. “As animist nature worshipers, we believe we are created from the clear pure mountain snow of Mount Kanchenjunga, and that after we die, our soul travels back through river Rongyoung. That is why the river is sacred for the Lepcha community.” 

A river silenced

It’s hard to fully comprehend then, how it must feel for Mayalmit and her community to witness a river so revered fall silent, the once free-flowing Teesta and its tributaries now choked by hydropower developments built over the past 30 years, among them two mega-dams in Sikkim State, the 1,200 MW Teesta Stage III and the 510 MW Teesta Stage V. Mayalmit lists the projects off one by one; all, she says, are an act of desecration for the Lepcha people—and environmentally unsustainable. 

Mayalmit Lepcha after a meeting with the women from the Self Help Group (SHG) at Hee-Gyathang, Lower Dzongu. Mayalmit is from this area and works closely with these strong women | Photo credit: International Rivers

“We only have an eight-kilometre stretch of free-flowing river remaining in the whole of Sikkim—this is the only part where we can we hear the Teesta River flowing. This is where my house is, where my village is,” Mayalmit says. It’s also where a new dam, the 520 MW Teesta Stage IV, is slated for construction, and Mayalmit is doing all within her power to stop it. 

“The river Teesta, it cannot raise its voice—it has been choked—but I can.”  

Affected Citizens of Teesta

For the past 14 years, Mayalmit has worked tirelessly as a volunteer for an organization called the Affected Citizens of Teesta (ACT), which is fighting to protect the Lepcha’s ancestral lands from hydropower projects—developments they consider a major threat to their environment,  community, and culture. 

“I started my activism to fight these dams early. I was in my first year of college, and we had a hunger strike, we protested peacefully, but many college students were arrested. It was such a difficult time, but I don’t feel any regrets. All this struggle we have had to go through has really made me strong.”

Mayalmit at the Women and Rivers Congress 2019 in Nepal. Mayal was one of 2 Lepcha women representing her story and the struggle of the Lepcha’s to keep the River Teesta flowing freely. | Photo Credit: International Rivers.

Vocal community opposition—including from ACT—is credited with successfully stopping four hydropower projects from going ahead in Sikkim. Mayalmit believes this is cause for hope, not just for the Lepchas, but for everyone whose lives are connected to the Teesta River, which winds its way through the Indian states of Sikkim and West Bengal before entering Bangladesh, where it joins the Jamuna (Brahmaputra) River, and emptying into the Bay of Bengal.

“The dams’ impacts are going to affect everyone in Sikkim, West Bengal, Bangladesh. We live in a very fragile environment and to have some 30 dams in a small area, experts tell us this is beyond the carrying capacity of the river, and that we will have a disaster in the future.” 

The natural world out of balance

These disasters have already begun, with the people of Sikkim witness to several flash floods, landslides and earthquakes, which are increasing in frequency and severity. Mayalmit attributes many of these “natural” disasters to the concentration of hydropower dams on the Teesta, which have aggravated the river’s existing propensity for flash flooding and further destabilized the surrounding valley, which was already prone to landslides. Add to this the impacts of climate change in the region—rapidly melting glaciers, less snowfall, drying streams and springs—and it’s a stark reminder, if one were needed, that the natural world is out of balance. 

Mayalmit is fearful of what is to come, but she draws strength from her spiritual beliefs and her community, particularly her fellow women, who have been instrumental in the campaign to keep the Teesta River free-flowing. 

“Let the river bless them”

“In my village, the women are united and the strongest in Dzongu. If we organize a meeting or protest, the women will work in advance, cutting fodder for their cattle for two, three days, then putting it in a store so that they can attend. I think we underestimate the women folk in the village, they have more information, are more aware of what will happen when the dams come—for me that’s inspiring.” 

Women representatives from all over Sikkim at the piloting of the Community Water Governance Curriculum by International Rivers and Affected Citizens of Teesta. | Photo Credit: International Rivers

“My mother is an inspiration for me, too. She does not tell me to get married, or get a government job, to settle down. She sees what I am doing is for the whole present and future generation. She and her friends, they weren’t educated—we are the first generation to get an education, so they want us to be their voice.”

While education has been a contributing factor to women’s rising participation in the campaign to save the Teesta, Mayalmit also believes it comes down to perseverance and a willingness to fight. “We’ve been jailed, we’ve been victimized, the government terrorizes us. We are not afraid of anything to save our holy land, Dzongu. In India, in the largest democracy in the world, we have freedom of speech, so we will always try to fight back.”

And so, the fight goes on, and the future feels full of uncertainty—but of hope and possibility, too. “The Rongyoung River will give inspiration to our Lepcha poets again, who have written songs and stories about the river,” muses Mayalmit. “Let the river bless them. Our ancestors have passed on the river to us and it’s our responsibility to leave the river undisturbed, to keep it safe, and pass it on to the next generation.” 

Picture of the Teesta and Rongyoung with the sacred Mt. Kanchenjunga in the distance at Dzongu, North Sikkim. | Photo Credit: Affected Citizens of Teesta (ACT)

International Rivers’ South Asia program is part of the regional Transboundary Rivers of South Asia program. Supported by the Government of Sweden, TROSA is a collaboration with Oxfam, IUCN, ICIMOD and many local organizations that works on some of the more complex rivers in South and Southeast Asia: the Ganga, Brahmaputra and Meghna river systems, including their tributaries such as the Teesta, and Asia’s last  last free flowing river, the Salween. TROSA works to promote improved cross-border governance of these transboundary rivers, support women’s leadership, and advance energy alternatives to large hydropower.

Featured image: Youth activists representing the Affected Citizens of Teesta Movement sit by the River Rongyoung, a sacred and major tributary of the River Teesta | Photo by Affected Citizens of Teesta (ACT)