郭晶晶星盘:Beijing hasn't denied plans to divert Yarlung...

来源:百度文库 编辑:九乡新闻网 时间:2024/04/28 23:43:58

Beijing hasn't denied plans to divert Yarlung Zangbo flow ?

Indian experts seem more cynical than their government over the China's building power station in Yarlung Zangbo River (Brahmaputra within India terrority). But if the Indian government does not worry, why would the experts?



2.jpg (555.4 KB)
2011-6-17 13:38



Media Reports -
"China's reaction to the alarm in India over diversion of Brahmaputra(Yarlung Zangbo River, or Yalu Tsangpo within Chinese territory) waters has failed to convince Indian experts even as the government tries hard to downplay the threat. China said on Tuesday that it will take into "full consideration'' the interest of lower riparian countries while implementing any project but once again refrained from denying directly that it was planning to divert the flow of Yarlung Zangbo River.


"The Chinese foreign ministry's statement (that China's policy is to 'take full consideration of the interests of the downstream states') is what Beijing has repeated ad nauseam while quietly building more dams to siphon off the waters of the Mekong(Lancang River within Chinese territory), Irtysh and Illy rivers,'' strategic affairs expert Brahma Chellaney said, adding that China had again not denied diverting Yarlung Zangbo River through mega dams.


3.jpg (430.11 KB)
2011-6-17 13:38



What is making matters worse for India is that China rejects the very notion of any water-sharing arrangement or treaty, like Indus Water Treaty between India and Pakistan, with any riparian neighbour. "The terms -- water sharing, shared water resources, treaty and common norms and rules -- are anathema to it. China is one of the only three countries that voted against the 1997 United Nations Convention on the Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses. This international convention lays down norms and rules which China rejects,'Chellaney said.



Chinese experts, led by Chinese Academy of Sciences academician Wang Guangqian, have come up with a proposal to divert water from the upper reaches towards Xinjiang. The proposal seems to have originated in 2001 but could not be acted upon apparently because of the heavy costs involved. According to a report by the Beijing based China Dialogue, Wang Guangqian's team is understood to be working with government's South-North Water Transfer office to organise a feasibility study for their proposal.



1.jpg (445.45 KB)
2011-6-17 13:38


While India has water sharing treaties with upstream neighbours like Nepal and Bhutan, there is no such treaty with China which, as the dominant riparian power in the region, refuses to enter into formal water sharing deals with any of its neighbours. India also has water sharing treaties with its downstream neighbours like Bangladesh and Pakistan. Nearly all important international rivers in China originate in ethnic-minority homelands which, as Chellaney said, were forcibly seized after the Communist Party of China came to power in 1949.



But why not look at the Indian government reaction, it counts more –

The Indian govt. confirmed that China has assured India it is only building a run-of-the-river power project on the Yarlung Zangbo that would not divert the river, External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna said today.


"Chinese authorities have conveyed to us that it is going to be a run-of-the-river project and there is going to be no reservoir. As a result, the question of diversion or storage of the water doesn't arise," Krishna told reporters after meeting Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi here.


He also said India was monitoring the development though satellites to verify reports.


"We have been monitoring through our satellite pictures as well as in our interaction with Chinese authorities. We also have made verification of our own," he said.







Times of India/TNN/IANS/PTI