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Water Issues In the Mekong River Basin. Karlyn Eckman Water in the World Seminar October 16 2009. International rivers. How to equitably share and govern riparian resources? Complex socioeconomic issues (rights of access to water resources, food security, cultural/linguistic diversity, etc.)
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Water Issues In the Mekong River Basin Karlyn Eckman Water in the World Seminar October 16 2009
International rivers • How to equitably share and govern riparian resources? • Complex socioeconomic issues (rights of access to water resources, food security, cultural/linguistic diversity, etc.) • Strategic national security challenges • Transboundary issues (pollution, navigation, flood control, etc.)
How to deal with common resources and shared problems? • Treaties and conventions • Inter-governmental agencies (MRCS; Nile Basin Initiative) • Joint powers agreements • Bilateral agreements
Some facts about the Mekong… • 21st largest river in the world • Annual peak flows from monsoon rains (April-September) • Annual cycles of drought and flooding • Not highly engineered • Water quality is declining from upland erosion, logging, agriculture and industry (increase in total suspended solids, conductivity, phosphorus and nitrates)
Biota of the Mekong… • Wet montane evergreen forests • Tonle Sap and delta • Vast mangrove forests along coastal areas • Wetlands • Freshwater swamp forests • Very high species diversity of vertebrates and invertebrates • Decline in large fish species
Macroeconomic trends: • Rapid population growth and rural to urban migration • Rapid urban growth • Land conversion • Loss of forests to logging and agriculture • Rapid industrialization (Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand) • Tourism (land grabbing for hotels) • Loss of wetlands for industry and development (ADB, World Bank) • Declining water quality from industrial development, increased pesticide use and shipping • Unsustainable land use and fishing practices → Chinese dam construction in the upper Mekong
People of the Lower Mekong Basin… • 55 million people live in the LMB • 70 ethnic and linguistic groups • 40 % live below the poverty line • Poor access to potable water, even in urban areas (<40%) • Poor access to sanitation (<25%) • Very high rates of water-borne disease • Decreasing access to common property resources
People of the Mekong… • History of wars and conflict (Khmer Rouge; US war in Vietnam; US bombing of Cambodia and Laos) • Legacy of displacement, resettlement, post-traumatic stress of local populations • Only Thailand was relatively unaffected by conflict
Food insecurity and vulnerability • Importance of subsistence agriculture, hunting and fishing • The majority of people rely on aquatic resources for their livelihoods • 60-80% of daily nutritional requirements come from fish and rice • Fish and non-fish aquatic resources that can be caught or gathered are the main part of daily diets • High dependence on fish in rice fields (snakehead and walking perch)
Importance of rice production and fish farming in rice fields • Multiple products from a single field (rice, fish, frogs, insects, etc.) • Fish are the most important source of protein • Rice paddy fish are both raised and wild-caught • Home-based fishing saves labor • Bomb craters used as fish ponds
Importance of subsistence fishing • Studies show that it takes more time to catch enough fish to eat • Average catch is smaller • Dams and reservoirs block migration of fish for spawning • Reduction in numbers of larger species
Governance of the Mekong • Mekong River Commission Secretariat (Vientienne, Laos) - MRCS • Mekong River national committees (NMCs) • Member countries: Cambodia, Lao PDR, Thailand, Vietnam • Observer countries: People’s Republic of China and Myanmar (Burma)
MRCS programs Flood management and mitigation (FM) - Cambodia Fisheries program Agriculture, Irrigation and Forestry Program Hydropower program Navigation program Capacity-building program Environment Program (EP) Data collection and monitoring – water quality EIA Wetland valuation Remote sensing Socioeconomic vulnerability assessment Basin development plan (BDP) Project support Social Impact Assessment Water utilization program (WUP) Basin modeling Procedures/agreements to govern water use
Summing up:Threats to Livelihoods in the LMB • Weak governance of riparian resources • Construction of large dams • Rapid economic and industrial growth • Moderate pollution • Climate change (estuary intrusion)
Possible outcomes? • Loss of biodiversity • Loss of forest cover • Loss of access to common property resources • Increased public health risks • More food insecurity and chronic malnutrition • General decline in the condition of rural populations
Summing up:Opportunities and priorities for the future in the LMB • Tremendous need for interdisciplinary research in the LMB (no common data sets) • New programs addressing biodiversity and conservation (IUCN, WWF, others) • New initiatives through the United Nations and bilateral donors (food security, poverty reduction, etc.)
International context • More interaction among researchers and organizations working on international river systems • Inter-agency learning through international conferences and workshops • IWMI, FAO, WWF, IUCN, World Commission on Dams and others are key change agents
Resources • http://internationalrivers.org • www.fao.org • www.iwmi.cgiar.org • http://www.mrcmekong.org/ • http://www.nilebasin.org/