Case: Balkan Rivers

International Rivers

📣Join us and our partners for a #RightsOfRivers event!

The #BalkanRivers are some of the last #free-flowing rivers of #Europe and are a hotspot for #biodiversity. These rivers are now being threathened by plans to build over 2,500 dams! #StopTheDams

Keynote speaker:

Monti Aguirre, Latin America Program Coordinator, International Rivers Register

Dams on the Balkan rivers – the ecocide case of Serbia’s Kopaonik Josanica region.

The Balkan rivers are some of the last free-flowing and wild rivers of Europe and are a hotspot for biodiversity with unique ecosystems and wildlife, including the critically endangered Balkan lynx. They are home to 69 different fish species that live nowhere else in the world, and their beds provide shelter for over 40% of all endangered freshwater mollusk species in Europe.

However, those rivers are now highly endangered with the plans to build over 3,000 dams on just about every one of them. If built, it would possibly result in nearly one in ten of Europe’s fish species being pushed to the brink of extinction with eleven endemic species being wiped out, seven more would be critically endangered, four types of sturgeon would be devastated and the number of endangered species would double to 24, according to the University of Graz report. Deforestation and soil erosion will follow, along with irrevocable changes to the course and character of untamed rivers, a quarter of which lie in pristine national parks and protected areas

That’s why, groups are mobilizing to campaign for the dams to be classed as #ecocide, for the recognition of the Rights of Rivers to be healthy and free-flowing, for the dams to be taken out of any ‘renewable’ energy policies, for the subsidies to be immediately stopped and for the dams to be taken out and rivers returned to their full health. More information

«Global Just Recovery» online event!

International Rivers

Happening now! Join in on the important and timely «Global Just Recovery» online event! You can register here: https://justrecoverygathering.org

Also, check out our work in topic of a #justrecovery 👉 https://rivers4recovery.org

Greenrecovery #Humanrights #justice https://www.rivers4recovery.org/

Molló Dam Removal in Catalonia, Spain

International Rivers

📌So great to see #damremovals happening around the world! These are critical steps to restoring freshwater ecosystems, preventing further climate destruction and more!

📌Learn more about recent efforts in Catalonia, Spain here: 👉 http://ow.ly/dEKq50EfKSB

Molló Dam Removal in Catalonia, Spain

By Dam Removal Europe April 1, 2021

Before and After Dam Removal ©Agència Catalana de l’Aigua

The Molló (also known as Ritort) dam was located at the top of the Ritort River in the Catalonian region of Spain. The dam was built in 1991, and was 7 meters high by 24 meters wide. For many years, the Molló dam served to retain and divert water to the Ritort hydroelectric plant, thus breaking the connectivity of the river.

The decision to demolish the dam and restore connectivity in this stretch of the river has made a new reality possible. 

Demolition works began in late August 2020 and were completed in early November of the same year. The video below, created by the Catalan Water Agency, shows the initial state of the river, the start and development of the works, and the final visual result of the environment once the action was carried out. Practitioners used a zipline system for the dam removal. 8 km of river were opened in a river that is a Natura 2000 network space and a trout genetic reserve.

This demolition, which is part of the Green Agenda of Catalonia, was carried out by Infraestructures.Cat with the direction and coordination of the Department of Territory and Sustainability, and the Catalan Water Agency. The local community has responded favorably.

Note: The video below is in Catalán, but has the option to automatically translate the subtitles into your preferred language. https://www.youtube.com/embed/wZBUmF39zaw?feature=oembed

Mekong hurt by sweet talk

International Rivers
@intlrivers

📌 «Data sharing won’t work without political will to co-manage the Mekong with respect to the ecological needs downstream» explained Pai Deetes, from our Southeast Asia program

Opinion

Editorial

Editorial Bangkok Post editorial column

published : 27 Mar 2021 at 04:00

When a regional grouping or cooperation framework marks its anniversary, it’s typical that respective members, through the government or the Foreign Affairs Ministry, send a congratulatory note.

The Mekong-Lancang Cooperation (MLC) framework that links Mekong riparian countries, namely China, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar Vietnam and Thailand is no exception. The MLC was conceived and pushed by China, with Thailand’s support, and celebrates its fifth year this month. The upper part of the river is called Lancang.

Sending Thailand’s congratulatory note on behalf of the Thai government this week was Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Affairs Minister Don Pramudwinai. He profusely praised the framework’s successes in the areas of connectivity, production capacity, water resources, cross-border economic development, agriculture and poverty reduction.

The foreign affairs minister gave high regard to cooperation on water resources that was elevated to ministerial level in 2019 and in particular commended China for remaining «committed to sharing year-round hydrological data with MLC member states». The data sharing is accorded with two MoUs the Thai cabinet gave the nod to in October last year.

It’s understandable to a certain extent that this kind of note will always be somewhat saccharine, but at the very least, the minister could, and should, have referenced some of the challenges faced with regard to water development along an international river that stretches about 4,900 kilometres from the Tibetan Plateau in China to Vietnam. It is well known that China, as an upstream state, is racing to build more and more dams that adversely affect the water ecology, causing trouble for downstream states, including local communities in Thailand. Excessive development has tremendously hurt the river, which is known for its diversity second only to the Amazon.

For years, the Mekong has lost many of its natural currents and flows, having been «tamed» by dam builders and developers who widened the waterway to accommodate large vessels. Needless to say, the negative changes to the river have intensified poverty in riparian states.

These negative consequences serve as a reminder of opportunities missed by Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha when he received a senior Chinese diplomat during a courtesy call earlier this year as the water level dropped to an unprecedented low.

The problem had been traced to a 50% cut in discharge further upstream at the Jinghong dam in China’s Yunnan province in order to bolster electricity production. It was reported that China had notified the MRC which was forced to later step up calls for Beijing to share all of its water data.

Yet, the Thai premier did not mention a single word about any of this during that meeting.

Indeed, China has a big role in the framework given that it has financially contributed to most projects, if not all, under the MLC. But this does not necessarily mean the superpower should enjoy a free hand.

As Pianporn Deetes, campaigns and communications director for the International Rivers’ Southeast Asia programme, rightly put it: Data sharing won’t work without political will to co-manage the Mekong with respect to the ecological needs downstream.

Even though Mr Don did not mention the need for water co-management in his March 23 note, he and the Thai government should feel obliged to develop the political will to preserve the river’s ecological balance.

Editorial

Bangkok Post editorial column

👉https://www.bangkokpost.com/opinion/opinion/2090331/mekong-hurt-by-sweet-talk

United for Rivers! | Day of Action 2021 Report Back

March 23, 2021

On March 14, 2021, we celebrated the 24th annual International Day of Action for Rivers. On this day people all over the world, gathered to protect and celebrate rivers. 

The International Day of Action Against Dams and For Rivers, Water and Life was adopted by the participants of the first International Meeting of People Affected by Dams, March 1997 in Curitiba, Brazil. Representatives from 20 countries decided that the International Day of Action would take place on March 14 – Brazil’s Day of Action Against Large Dams.

This year we’ve recorded an astonishing 120+ events in 32 countries (and the photos and stories are still coming in)! You wrote to elected officials. You organized river cleanups. You held online webinars, and covid-safe river walks, and paddle board celebrations! This is true from Bangladesh to Guam, from Germany to Nigeria. The outpouring of activity we’ve seen in the last week –  the variety, diversity and passion of our movement – is truly an inspiration. Even in these challenging times, you have made your voices heard.

This is a remarkable moment.

In a time of division, we are finding connection and common cause – across languages, cultures and borders. We know that more unites us than divides us. And we know that we must join hands to protect our rivers, because they are essential to our future on this planet.

Todos Al Rio | Santa Rosa Del Sur, Colombia

20 community members of Santa Rosa Del Sur in Bolivar, Colombia gathered to participate in a clean up along the El Platanal River; a critical source of drinking water for the municipality. Photo from Alcaldía Municipal de Santa Rosa del Sur.

Rights of Rivers South Asia Alliance | Day of Action Webinar

The Rights of Rivers South Asia Alliance was officially launched on March 14,2021 marking the International Day of Action on Rivers. The alliance hosted a public webinar with different perspectives on Rights Of Rivers from Bangladesh’s High Court Verdict granting all rivers in Bangladesh to have Rights, Nepal’s pending Water Bills in parliament that talks about Rights of Rivers and Free Flowing Rivers and finally an indigenous perspective from a small Himalayan State of Sikkim, where the Lepcha community has been fighting for years to protect what’s left of the already damed Teesta River.  RoRSA aims to foster dialogue and collaboration around the concept of Rights of Rivers, and to enable community empowerment, regeneration, conservation and responsible policymaking. Inspired by the worldviews of local and indigenous communities across South Asia and the world, we recognise that systemic changes that honour the deep interconnections between humans and nature are essential in order to transform destructive current paradigms of development.

Barak River in Nheng | India

Community members along the Barak River in Nheng (Langpram) village on March 11. Community awareness visits in several villages in the catchment areas of Barak River and Irang River in Tamei areas of Tamenglong district from March 12 to 14 were held to mark the International River Day celebration. Events organized/ photos provided by Centre for Research and Advocacy (CRA) Manipur, Jupiter Yambem Centre, Imphal and the JAC against Pabram Dam.

Press Conference for Day of Action | Bangladesh 

Bangladesh Poribesh Andolon (Bapa), Waterkeepers Bangladesh, National River Alliance and Jatiya Nodi Rokkha Andolon jointly organized a press conference ahead of International Day of Action for Rivers. In the meeting, they discussed the importance of stopping faulty river management, and dredging in order to restore healthy flow and navigability to the rivers. Image: Screenshot of the press conference, featuring International Rivers Board member Sharon Khan giving a statement on behalf of Waterkeepers Alliance. Photo provided by Sharon Khan. 

Hudson River Celebration | New Jersey 

“It was bitter cold and windy by the Hudson River, in New York, nevertheless, a group of hardy seniors gathered to call attention to the river and to all rivers. We created a caravan, complete with signs, a reporter joined us, we read poems, made music with a drum and rain stick, shared stories from around the world and returned to the river pieces of fossilized limestone dated at 400 million years.” Photos and description proved by Ann Braudis, New Jersey

Save the Mekong | Mekong, Thai-Lao border in Ubon, Thailand

Community members gathered along the banks of the Mekong River  in Ubon, Thailand, to protest dam developments threatening their livelihoods. Actions like these demonstrate the resiliency and perseverance of the local people to protect the sacred river. Photos provided by Salween Community Network, International Rivers Southeast Asia Program and Hug Namkong Group.

As river defenders, we are united by something deeper than language or culture.We share a fundamental belief in the rights of communities to determine their water and energy futures.

And we know that for so many communities, a healthy river is central to that future. 

We must hold onto this truth as we move forward. And we can take heart that we are part of a truly grassroots, global movement. It’s an honor to be in it with you.

2021 Day of Action Photo Album

We hope you enjoy these highlighted events. To see more, check out the full Flickr album here. If you have photos from your event you would like to add to the album please email dayofaction@internationalrivers.org.

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

International Rivers

📌Happy #WorldHealthDay!
Our health and the health of rivers and freshwater ecosystems are deeply intertwined. Everyone has the right to healthy food, and clean water and air!

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

#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

Seminario para la protección de los ríos de la Patagonia

Puelo Patagonia Corporación

25 nov. 2020

El día martes 24 de noviembre, realizamos el «Seminario para la protección de los ríos de la Patagonia», con el objetivo de dar a conocer el contexto de iniciativas asociadas a la protección de ríos en el mundo, el marco legal en el contexto nacional asociado a los ríos, las necesidades de avanzar en políticas públicas vinculantes en la materia y la divulgación de experiencias en la Patagonia.

TEMAS:

  • Contexto internacional de la protección de Ríos (Monti Aguirre)
    -Energía, agua y cambio climático: Desde lo regulatorio a lo constitucional (Marcelo Mena)
  • La conservación de los ríos desde las cumbres al mar: desafíos y oportunidades en el paisaje Patagónico (Dr. Brian Reid)
  • Ley de Ríos Salvajes: Una oportunidad para avanzar en la defensa de ríos en Chile (Macarena Soler)

EXPOSITORES:

  • Monti Aguirre, Coordinadora del Programa de America Latina, International Rivers
  • Dr. Brian Reid, Limnólogo, subdirector científico Centro de Investigación en Ecosistemas de la Patagonia (CIEP), y coordinador macrozona austral para la red de investigación en recursos hídricos.
  • Marcelo Mena, ex ministro de Medio Ambiente, director del Centro de Acción Climática de la Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso y miembro del directorio de Fundación MERI
  • Macarena Soler, abogada por la Ley de ríos Salvajes y Ley de Filantropía ambiental, fundadora de Geute Conservación Sur, directora Puelo Patagonia.

MODERADORA:
Bárbara Tupper, Periodista Ladera Sur.

III Encuentro Internacional de Afectados por Represas y sus Aliados. Los Ojos del Mundo están Puestos en Temaca

Multiverso360, 15 de octubre,2010

Multiverso tuvo como invitados a varios de los organizadores del Tercer Encuentro Internacional de Afectados por Represas y sus Aliados. el pasado 9 de octubre de 2010. Susana Wong integrante de International Rivers, Consuelo Acevedo del Movimiento Social en defensa del Rio Sogamoso en Colombia, a Carmen Díaz y Marco Von Borstell del Instituto Mexicano para el Desarrollo Comunitario.