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China can't just keep building the world's biggest dam in secret, Brahmaputra project poses risks for India and Bangladesh

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China can't just keep building the world's biggest dam in secret

Brahmaputra project poses risks for India and Bangladesh

Brahma Chellaney
July 14, 2023 17:00 JST

https%253A%252F%252Fcms-image-bucket-production-ap-northeast-1-a7d2.s3.ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%252Fimages%252F2%252F3%252F0%252F6%252F46226032-5-eng-GB%252FCropped-16892607362020-07-20T034251Z_2140417443_RC2RWH9ABX3U_RTRMADP_3_CHINA-FLOODS-THREEGORGES.JPG

The Three Gorges Dam discharges water to lower reservoir levels following heavy rain. China latest hydropower project would be three times bigger. © Reuters


China is unmatched as the world's hydro hegemon, with more large dams in service than every other country combined. Now it is building the world's first super dam, close to its heavily militarized frontier with India.

This megaproject, with a planned capacity of 60 gigawatts, would generate three times as much electricity as the Three Gorges Dam, now the world's largest hydropower plant. China, though, has given few updates about the project's status since the National People's Congress approved it in March 2021.

Opacity about the development of past projects has often served as cover for quiet action. Beijing has a record of keeping work on major dam projects on international rivers under wraps until the activity can no longer be hidden in commercially available satellite imagery.

The super dam is located in some of the world's most treacherous terrain, in an area long thought impassable.

Here, the Brahmaputra, known to Tibetans as the Yarlung Tsangpo, drops almost 3,000 meters as it takes a sharp southerly turn from the Himalayas into India, with the world's highest-altitude major river descending through the globe's longest and steepest canyon.

Twice as deep as the U.S. Grand Canyon, the Brahmaputra gorge holds Asia's greatest untapped water reserves while the river's precipitous fall creates one of the greatest concentrations of river energy on Earth. The combination has acted as a powerful magnet for Chinese dam builders.

The behemoth dam, however, is the world's riskiest project as it is being built in a seismically active area. This makes it potentially a ticking water bomb for downstream communities in India and Bangladesh.
The southeastern part of the Tibetan Plateau is earthquake prone because it sits on the geological fault line where the Indian and Eurasian plates collide.

The 2008 Sichuan earthquake, along the Tibetan Plateau's eastern rim, killed 87,000 people and drew international attention to the phenomenon of reservoir-triggered seismicity (RTS).

Some Chinese and American scientists drew a link between the quake and Sichuan's Zipingpu Dam, which came into service two years earlier near a seismic fault. They suggested that the weight of the several hundred million cubic meters of water impounded in the dam's reservoir could have triggered RTS or severe tectonic stresses.

But even without a quake, the new super dam could be a threat to downriver communities if torrential monsoon rains trigger flash floods in the Great Bend of the Brahmaputra. Barely two years ago, some 400 million Chinese were put at risk after record flooding endangered the Three Gorges Dam.

Meanwhile, the 11 large dams China has built on the upper reaches of the Mekong have had many negative ecological impacts, including recurrent drought, for downriver nations. But not only is China constructing more big dams on the Mekong, it is now also turning its attention to tapping the bounteous water resources in the Brahmaputra Basin.

In pursuing its controversial megaproject on the Brahmaputra, China is cloaking its construction activity to mute international reaction.

China presented the super dam project for the approval of the National People's Congress only after it had built sufficient infrastructure to start transporting heavy equipment, materials and workers to the remote site.

Barely two months after parliament's approval two years ago, Beijing announced that it had accomplished the feat of completing a "highway through the world's deepest canyon." That highway ends very close to the Indian border.

The following month, Beijing announced the launch of a new rail line from Lhasa to Nyangtri, a frontier military base less than 16 kilometers from the India border. In fact, President Xi Jinping began a surprise tour of Tibet in July 2021 from Nyangtri, taking the new train from there to the regional capital.

The new infrastructure indicates that work on the dam's foundation likely began quietly after the opening of the railroad and highway.

The Brahmaputra was one of the world's last undammed rivers until China began constructing a series of midsized dams on sections upstream from the famous canyon. With its dam building now moving close to border areas, China will in due course be able to leverage transboundary flows in its relations with rival India.

But the brunt of the environmental havoc that the megaproject is likely to wreak will be borne by Bangladesh, in the last stretch of the river. The environmental damage, however, is likely to extend up through Tibet, one of the world's most biodiverse regions. In fact, with its super dam, China will be desecrating the canyon region which is a crucial Tibetan holy place.

A cardinal principle of water peace is transparency. The far-reaching strategic, environmental and inter-riparian implications of the largest dam ever conceived make it imperative that China be transparent. Only sustained international pressure can force Beijing to drop the veil of secrecy surrounding its project.

 
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China can't just keep building the world's biggest dam in secret

Brahmaputra project poses risks for India and Bangladesh

Brahma Chellaney
July 14, 2023 17:00 JST

https%253A%252F%252Fcms-image-bucket-production-ap-northeast-1-a7d2.s3.ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%252Fimages%252F2%252F3%252F0%252F6%252F46226032-5-eng-GB%252FCropped-16892607362020-07-20T034251Z_2140417443_RC2RWH9ABX3U_RTRMADP_3_CHINA-FLOODS-THREEGORGES.JPG

The Three Gorges Dam discharges water to lower reservoir levels following heavy rain. China latest hydropower project would be three times bigger. © Reuters


China is unmatched as the world's hydro hegemon, with more large dams in service than every other country combined. Now it is building the world's first super dam, close to its heavily militarized frontier with India.

This megaproject, with a planned capacity of 60 gigawatts, would generate three times as much electricity as the Three Gorges Dam, now the world's largest hydropower plant. China, though, has given few updates about the project's status since the National People's Congress approved it in March 2021.

Opacity about the development of past projects has often served as cover for quiet action. Beijing has a record of keeping work on major dam projects on international rivers under wraps until the activity can no longer be hidden in commercially available satellite imagery.

The super dam is located in some of the world's most treacherous terrain, in an area long thought impassable.

Here, the Brahmaputra, known to Tibetans as the Yarlung Tsangpo, drops almost 3,000 meters as it takes a sharp southerly turn from the Himalayas into India, with the world's highest-altitude major river descending through the globe's longest and steepest canyon.

Twice as deep as the U.S. Grand Canyon, the Brahmaputra gorge holds Asia's greatest untapped water reserves while the river's precipitous fall creates one of the greatest concentrations of river energy on Earth. The combination has acted as a powerful magnet for Chinese dam builders.

The behemoth dam, however, is the world's riskiest project as it is being built in a seismically active area. This makes it potentially a ticking water bomb for downstream communities in India and Bangladesh.
The southeastern part of the Tibetan Plateau is earthquake prone because it sits on the geological fault line where the Indian and Eurasian plates collide.

The 2008 Sichuan earthquake, along the Tibetan Plateau's eastern rim, killed 87,000 people and drew international attention to the phenomenon of reservoir-triggered seismicity (RTS).

Some Chinese and American scientists drew a link between the quake and Sichuan's Zipingpu Dam, which came into service two years earlier near a seismic fault. They suggested that the weight of the several hundred million cubic meters of water impounded in the dam's reservoir could have triggered RTS or severe tectonic stresses.

But even without a quake, the new super dam could be a threat to downriver communities if torrential monsoon rains trigger flash floods in the Great Bend of the Brahmaputra. Barely two years ago, some 400 million Chinese were put at risk after record flooding endangered the Three Gorges Dam.

Meanwhile, the 11 large dams China has built on the upper reaches of the Mekong have had many negative ecological impacts, including recurrent drought, for downriver nations. But not only is China constructing more big dams on the Mekong, it is now also turning its attention to tapping the bounteous water resources in the Brahmaputra Basin.

In pursuing its controversial megaproject on the Brahmaputra, China is cloaking its construction activity to mute international reaction.

China presented the super dam project for the approval of the National People's Congress only after it had built sufficient infrastructure to start transporting heavy equipment, materials and workers to the remote site.

Barely two months after parliament's approval two years ago, Beijing announced that it had accomplished the feat of completing a "highway through the world's deepest canyon." That highway ends very close to the Indian border.

The following month, Beijing announced the launch of a new rail line from Lhasa to Nyangtri, a frontier military base less than 16 kilometers from the India border. In fact, President Xi Jinping began a surprise tour of Tibet in July 2021 from Nyangtri, taking the new train from there to the regional capital.

The new infrastructure indicates that work on the dam's foundation likely began quietly after the opening of the railroad and highway.

The Brahmaputra was one of the world's last undammed rivers until China began constructing a series of midsized dams on sections upstream from the famous canyon. With its dam building now moving close to border areas, China will in due course be able to leverage transboundary flows in its relations with rival India.

But the brunt of the environmental havoc that the megaproject is likely to wreak will be borne by Bangladesh, in the last stretch of the river. The environmental damage, however, is likely to extend up through Tibet, one of the world's most biodiverse regions. In fact, with its super dam, China will be desecrating the canyon region which is a crucial Tibetan holy place.

A cardinal principle of water peace is transparency. The far-reaching strategic, environmental and inter-riparian implications of the largest dam ever conceived make it imperative that China be transparent. Only sustained international pressure can force Beijing to drop the veil of secrecy surrounding its project.

Yeah, be responsible and stop dumping the radioactive water into the oceans to harm all the people around Pacific.
 
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China can't just keep building the world's biggest dam in secret

Brahmaputra project poses risks for India and Bangladesh

Brahma Chellaney
July 14, 2023 17:00 JST

https%253A%252F%252Fcms-image-bucket-production-ap-northeast-1-a7d2.s3.ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%252Fimages%252F2%252F3%252F0%252F6%252F46226032-5-eng-GB%252FCropped-16892607362020-07-20T034251Z_2140417443_RC2RWH9ABX3U_RTRMADP_3_CHINA-FLOODS-THREEGORGES.JPG

The Three Gorges Dam discharges water to lower reservoir levels following heavy rain. China latest hydropower project would be three times bigger. © Reuters


China is unmatched as the world's hydro hegemon, with more large dams in service than every other country combined. Now it is building the world's first super dam, close to its heavily militarized frontier with India.

This megaproject, with a planned capacity of 60 gigawatts, would generate three times as much electricity as the Three Gorges Dam, now the world's largest hydropower plant. China, though, has given few updates about the project's status since the National People's Congress approved it in March 2021.

Opacity about the development of past projects has often served as cover for quiet action. Beijing has a record of keeping work on major dam projects on international rivers under wraps until the activity can no longer be hidden in commercially available satellite imagery.

The super dam is located in some of the world's most treacherous terrain, in an area long thought impassable.

Here, the Brahmaputra, known to Tibetans as the Yarlung Tsangpo, drops almost 3,000 meters as it takes a sharp southerly turn from the Himalayas into India, with the world's highest-altitude major river descending through the globe's longest and steepest canyon.

Twice as deep as the U.S. Grand Canyon, the Brahmaputra gorge holds Asia's greatest untapped water reserves while the river's precipitous fall creates one of the greatest concentrations of river energy on Earth. The combination has acted as a powerful magnet for Chinese dam builders.

The behemoth dam, however, is the world's riskiest project as it is being built in a seismically active area. This makes it potentially a ticking water bomb for downstream communities in India and Bangladesh.
The southeastern part of the Tibetan Plateau is earthquake prone because it sits on the geological fault line where the Indian and Eurasian plates collide.

The 2008 Sichuan earthquake, along the Tibetan Plateau's eastern rim, killed 87,000 people and drew international attention to the phenomenon of reservoir-triggered seismicity (RTS).

Some Chinese and American scientists drew a link between the quake and Sichuan's Zipingpu Dam, which came into service two years earlier near a seismic fault. They suggested that the weight of the several hundred million cubic meters of water impounded in the dam's reservoir could have triggered RTS or severe tectonic stresses.

But even without a quake, the new super dam could be a threat to downriver communities if torrential monsoon rains trigger flash floods in the Great Bend of the Brahmaputra. Barely two years ago, some 400 million Chinese were put at risk after record flooding endangered the Three Gorges Dam.

Meanwhile, the 11 large dams China has built on the upper reaches of the Mekong have had many negative ecological impacts, including recurrent drought, for downriver nations. But not only is China constructing more big dams on the Mekong, it is now also turning its attention to tapping the bounteous water resources in the Brahmaputra Basin.

In pursuing its controversial megaproject on the Brahmaputra, China is cloaking its construction activity to mute international reaction.

China presented the super dam project for the approval of the National People's Congress only after it had built sufficient infrastructure to start transporting heavy equipment, materials and workers to the remote site.

Barely two months after parliament's approval two years ago, Beijing announced that it had accomplished the feat of completing a "highway through the world's deepest canyon." That highway ends very close to the Indian border.

The following month, Beijing announced the launch of a new rail line from Lhasa to Nyangtri, a frontier military base less than 16 kilometers from the India border. In fact, President Xi Jinping began a surprise tour of Tibet in July 2021 from Nyangtri, taking the new train from there to the regional capital.

The new infrastructure indicates that work on the dam's foundation likely began quietly after the opening of the railroad and highway.

The Brahmaputra was one of the world's last undammed rivers until China began constructing a series of midsized dams on sections upstream from the famous canyon. With its dam building now moving close to border areas, China will in due course be able to leverage transboundary flows in its relations with rival India.

But the brunt of the environmental havoc that the megaproject is likely to wreak will be borne by Bangladesh, in the last stretch of the river. The environmental damage, however, is likely to extend up through Tibet, one of the world's most biodiverse regions. In fact, with its super dam, China will be desecrating the canyon region which is a crucial Tibetan holy place.

A cardinal principle of water peace is transparency. The far-reaching strategic, environmental and inter-riparian implications of the largest dam ever conceived make it imperative that China be transparent. Only sustained international pressure can force Beijing to drop the veil of secrecy surrounding its project.


The guy who wrote this is an anti-China hack in Modi's administration.

How will it harm Bangladesh any more than India already is doing when

a. India is unilaterally withdrawing 95% of the water from the Brahmaputra during the lean season and

b. India opening all the floodgates during Monsoon?

We are screwed in both seasons. With a compliant govt. in Dhaka, what Delhi is getting away with - is criminal.

This is on the Bangladesh side after Indians withdraw all the water.

1693170271185.png


And this is in the monsoon
1693170402218.png


I say China should unilaterally withdraw all the water from the Brahmaputra, there is no need to supply ingrate India with water.
 
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India is taking its own precautions to ensure India is minimally affected

 
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The guy who wrote this is an anti-China hack in Modi's administration.

How will it harm Bangladesh any more than India already is doing when

a. India is unilaterally withdrawing 95% of the water from the Brahmaputra during the lean season and

b. India opening all the floodgates during Monsoon?

We are screwed in both seasons. With a compliant govt. in Dhaka, what Delhi is getting away with - is criminal.

This is on the Bangladesh side after Indians withdraw all the water.

View attachment 949213

And this is in the monsoon
View attachment 949214

I say China should unilaterally withdraw all the water from the Brahmaputra, there is no need to supply ingrate India with water.
Good. India has enough supply from other streams of Brahmaputra. Let the lungis starve for water. Great idea.
 
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Good. India has enough supply from other streams of Brahmaputra. Let the lungis starve for water. Great idea.
These Lungis are honestly the dumbest race of people on the planet, pretty ugly too, no wonder they stitch chaddi. Just have a look at the brahmaputra river, it is barely a trickle even in Arunachal pradesh, forget China and this chauthi fail chimp IQ Lungi thinks China blocking a couple of streams will affect India in any way :lol:, 95% of the water in the Brahmaputra comes from streams well into the Indian side which originate due to monsoon.

Capture55.PNG



India should build plenty of dams on the river, open them all at once in the middle of monsoon and flood BD and get rid of them, then use this land for agriculture, world will applaud us for getting rid of this riffraff.

IMG_8915.jpeg


hero-alam-1200x720-1-1200x700.jpg
13707694_509861589222978_8003489797100782228_n.jpg
 
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These Lungis are honestly the dumbest race of people on the planet, shit ugly too, no wonder they stitch chaddi. Just have a look at the brahmaputra river, it is barely a trickle even in Arunachal pradesh, forget China and this chauthi fail chimp IQ Lungi thinks China blocking a couple of streams will affect India in any way :lol:, 95% of the water in the Brahmaputra comes from streams well into the Indian side which originate due to monsoon.

View attachment 949219


India should build plenty of dams on the river, open them all at once in the middle of monsoon and flood these Lungis and get rid of them, then use this land for agriculture, world will applaud us for getting rid of this riffraff.

View attachment 949223

View attachment 949221View attachment 949222
It would be a good opportunity to use this as an excuse and block all water with our own dams. We will blame on China. Modi seems to have already started on it.
 
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So from the comments I see that BD posters saying this is non-issue. Indian guys with geological knowledge also saying this dam is of no concern. So, why is the thread relevant? Everyone seems to be happy with the dam. I guess everyone can sleep peacefully.
 
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So from the comments I see that BD posters saying this is non-issue. Indian guys with geological knowledge also saying this dam is of no concern. So, why is the thread relevant? Everyone seems to be happy with the dam. I guess everyone can sleep peacefully.

Chinese dam is no concern but way too much water is allowed unimpeded into BD. We need to build several dams to prevent that. Even if we don't need the water, we should still build the dams. It is better that water goes to waste than it goes to BD.
 
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Chinese dam is no concern but way too much water is allowed unimpeded into BD. We need to build several dams to prevent that. Even if we don't need the water, we should still build the dams. It is better that water goes to waste than it goes to BD.

Being a liar has a limit. Liar liar - pants on fire. :lol:

Indian govt. holds back the water using dams in the lean season and opens all the floodgates in the monsoon.

This is Bangladesh in the Monsoon on the banks of the Brahmaputra, Indians are holding back the water using dams to save us from flooding?? So nice of them.... :lol:

1693681010585.png


They are the number one selfish people who watch out only for themselves. We have water sharing agreements for certain cusecs supplied, to which they pay absolutely no heed. They can do this because no one in Int'l fora for water-sharing cares.

Indian govt. makes the best use of the water in both seasons. They make maximum use of their status as upper riparian country by holding back water when it is useful for them and they don't care that there is none for us.

Bhakt Liar Indians are so cheap, they don't even do any dredging on their rivers, so they get flooded in Assam and other Indian areas before the water gets to Bangladesh borders.

In Bangladesh we do Billions of dollars of dredging every year, so rivers stay navigable and don't flood their banks in the monsoon.

China is fine to dam the river upstream before India, Bangladeshis have no problem with it. We can't use the water regardless.
 
Last edited:
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Being a liar has a limit. Liar liar - pants on fire. :lol:

Indian govt. holds back the water using dams in the lean season and open all the floodgates in the monsoon.

They are the number one selfish people. We have water sharing agreements for certain cusecs supplied, to which they pay absolutely no heed.

Indian govt. makes the best use of the water in both seasons. They make maximum use of their status as upper riparian country.

Bhakt Liar Indians are so cheap, they don't even do any dredging on their rivers, so they get flooded in Assam and other Indian areas before the water gets to Bangladesh borders.

In Bangladesh we do Billions of dollars of dredging every year, so rivers stay navigable and don't flood their banks in the monsoon.

China is fine to dam the river upstream before India, Bangladeshis have no problem with it. We can't use the water regardless.

Angry Lungi :-)
IMG_8915.jpeg
 
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Indians are having a heart attack at the prospect of China diverting water from the Brahmaputra. :lol:

China is not the upstream hydrohegemon, India is.


These Lungis are honestly the dumbest race of people on the planet, pretty ugly too, no wonder they stitch chaddi. Just have a look at the brahmaputra river, it is barely a trickle even in Arunachal pradesh, forget China and this chauthi fail chimp IQ Lungi thinks China blocking a couple of streams will affect India in any way :lol:, 95% of the water in the Brahmaputra comes from streams well into the Indian side which originate due to monsoon.

View attachment 949219


India should build plenty of dams on the river, open them all at once in the middle of monsoon and flood BD and get rid of them, then use this land for agriculture, world will applaud us for getting rid of this riffraff.

View attachment 949223

View attachment 949221View attachment 949222.

Calling us names and giving gali is not going to help - Rajesh.

We have the option of stopping all Indian imports - about $50 Billion worth every year.

Our GDP per capita nominal is about equal (by some counts) and by others even higher than that of yours.

Those are the FACTS and what we CAN do, anytime we want.

As for you stopping Brahmaputra water using dams - dilli door ast.

You and your economy are dependent on us, not the other way around.

Why resort to name calling and show your low class status.
 
Last edited:
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Indians are having a heart attack at the prospect of China diverting water from the Brahmaputra. :lol:

China is not the upstream hydrohegemon, India is.




Calling us names and giving gali is not going to help - Rajesh.

We have the option of stopping all Indian imports - about $50 Billion worth every year.

Our GDP per capita nominal is about equal (by some counts) and by others even higher than that of yours.

Those are the FACTS and what we CAN do, anytime we want.

As for you stopping Brahmaputra water using dams - dilli door ast.

You and your economy are dependent on us, not the other way around.

Why resort to name calling and show your low class status.
Ok Lungi :lol:
 
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Well, dud, you can keep it secret if you don't do shit.....
 
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