| Cover
feature
Big dams in Southasia
The dangers of inevitability
By : Kanak Mani
dixit

venantius j pinto |
The fight against large dams
and the reservoirs they impound is a phenomenon that sparks
wherever and whenever the people of Southasia feel empowered
enough to resist. And so, the “temples of modern India”
of the 1950s and 1960s had by the 1980s turned into targets
for attack by people’s movements, environmentalists
and cultural activists alike, but not enough by economists
and political scientists. This is probably why, as the articles
in this issue of Himal indicate, even as high dams make a
comeback in India and are bound to make a return elsewhere
in Southasia, the overt arguments remain essentially the same
and predicated on culture and environment rather than on market
value, equity and prior consent. As long as the paradigm of
resistance does not base itself on the foundation of economic
logic and political organisation, the national and sub-national
establishments will continue to ignore, resist or evade the
anti-dam activists, egged on by the sheer weight of the demand
for flowing water – as the underground aquifers in the
plains go dry, and as the demand for irrigation, drinking
water and hydropower skyrocket.
Sunderlal Bahuguna, who made
waves as leader of the Chipko Movement and as tireless crusader
against the Tehri Dam in Uttaranchal, is still up and about.
But today, he is treated more as an artefact than a messiah.
The rising tide of the Indian middle class has a willing collaborator
in the mainstream media, which deliberately drowns out voices
that question the building of massive dams. Indeed, Bahuguna
was already sidelined by the time the waters of the Bhagirathi
rose to engulf Tehri town in 2001. For two months this summer,
activists of Sikkim’s upper Teesta were on a hunger
strike to block interventions on their river; but their voices
were ignored in Gangtok and New Delhi alike. The Narmada Bachao
Andolan, representing the pain of hundreds of thousands seems
to get grudging attention from mainstream media largely because
of the Medha Patkar phenomenon.
It so happens that in order
to either impound a reservoir or to have enough of a physical
drop to create hydro power, you need hilly terrain. Southasia’s
hills, meanwhile, have traditionally been home to marginalised
Adivasis and other groups who often do not have enough handle
on the estates of state to put up a resistance, using the
bureaucracy, courts, media or political institutions. When
the politically powerful plains make demands for water and
electricity, it is nigh impossible for anyone to resist.
Everything in the developing
politico-economy points to enormous pressures on the river
systems of the Subcontinent in the days ahead. The rapidly
expanding economy of India in particular, and Southasia as
a whole, heralds an unrelenting and exponentially expanding
demand for water in the coming decades. The populist energising
of society will make it impossible for political leaders,
bureaucrats and diplomats alike to resist the call from within
their own kind for high dams upstream, and the engineers and
administrators will goad the process even if the social scientists
think otherwise.
The demand from Bihar, West
Bengal and Bangladesh for a high dam on the Kosi River, for
example, will only get more strident, even when it is clear
that one has also to learn to live with the flood which provides
fertility and recedes within days in most monsoons. This clamour
rises even as hydrologists point to local structures, local
rainfall, local drainage promoting inundation, and hold that
floods in the plains cannot be controlled even if all the
rivers of Nepal are plugged. Meanwhile, the demand for water
for New Delhi and the urban centres of Punjab and Haryana
is likely, before long, to force the Nepali establishment
to concede on the high dam at Pancheswor on the Mahakali River,
which divides Uttaranchal and Nepal’s far west. But
amid all this power play, the answer lies not in resisting
dams per se, but resisting the pressures to build them without
proper valuation. And indeed it is at the altar of valuation
that the Pancheswor project is stuck thus far, even after
a treaty has been signed.
Imagine the scenario when
Southasia’s middle-class economy hits its stride in
the years ahead, and the kind of capitalist ethos and political
certitudes that will subvert discussion and debate. Can those
that oppose big dams resist the pressure that will arise?
Will they have the resilience to fight the consumerist steamroller
over the long haul? Will the politicisation of mountain society
itself be sufficient to fight the insistence of the demand-driven
plains? They can, and it is about new vision, ideas and a
politics that respects the highland inhabitants and their
right to demand market rates for the resources in their command.
And the goal of hill activism will be to expand the definition
of ‘cost-benefit’ and to insist that the economic,
environmental, cultural and social costs are included in the
tabulation.
Highland vs plains
It is interesting to note that in Sikkim, as in the Indian
Northeast, as the national and regional demand for electricity
increases, the anti-dam activists hold out the spiritual sanctity
of important sites, or put forth the ecological argument.
There is no denying the deeply felt bond of the hill people
with their sacred environs; but it is equally true that cultural
and environmental activism have become an important means
to fight back politically against the demand juggernaut. The
fact is that Adivasis and other marginalised communities of
the hill regions have, by virtue of the terrain they inhabit,
become the most proximate owners and custodians of the white
water and the renewable energy it represents. Like the Bedouins
of Arabia, they suddenly find themselves holding on to this
‘white gold’, even as they as yet lack the capacity
to defend their interests against the metropolitan demand.
The future of dams and reservoirs must henceforth be decided
on the basis of real rather than colonial-era economics.
In the tussle over resources,
the metropolis and plains will willy nilly try to short-change
the Adivasi and hill communities. They will inundate the elevated
valleys to impound water; they will pay a low price for energy
that should be purchased for much more; they will try to deny
payment for ‘downstream benefits’. And for the
establishmentarian economist, Bhutan becomes a paragon of
hydropower sagacity, but it is able to export power for two
very particular reasons: it is not a democracy; and it sells
its electricity cheaply to India. The Bhutanese model of hydropower
production is not based on economics, and hence cannot be
emulated by Uttaranchal, Nepal or Arunachal.
Undoubtedly, the political
confusion in Nepal, coupled with the exaggerated fears of
Indian designs on Nepal’s natural resources, has prevented
the landlocked economy from benefiting from feeding the Indian
power grids. But as the smaller communities within each country
have used environmental and cultural arguments, the nationalist
rhetoric within Nepal could also be seen as a tripwire mechanism
that has kept the country from exporting water before it is
politically ready to achieve a strong bargaining stance.

Still with something to say: Bahuguna |
There are water experts in
Nepal who consider the existence of the southern market a
myth, because of subsidies within the Indian power economy,
and for example, its ability to extract cheap power from Bhutan.
But there is another side to the developing story, that the
Indian economy is changing and paradigms are being turned
on their head, with the power bureaucracy becoming more efficient
within itself due to globalisation pressures.
On the whole the politicisation
of plains which pushes the administrators and politicians
to pursue the blind exploitation of Himalayan and other highland
water, is being countered by the delayed, but increasing politicisation
of hill communities. For now, this politicisation is being
propelled by cultural activism and environmental arguments,
but to resist railroading and cooption in the long run, the
host riverine communities must get savvy on hydro economics,
and organise politically to extract the maximum at the bargaining
table.
There is therefore a need
to redefine ‘market-value’. This means that the
cost-benefit of a dam project must, besides the expenditure
of building a dam, a powerhouse and a transmission line, include
the costs of the impact on the host environment, the siltation
of the reservoir, the displacement of the inhabitants, the
downstream benefits of stored water and so on. Because siltation
will lead to reservoirs getting filled up with sand and detritus
and lose their utility within half a century, in the case
of many projects, the eventual decommissioning of a dam-reservoir
too must be included in the costing.
Then there are the earthquakes
to consider. Massive tremors are highly likely in most of
the areas where the mega dams are planned, and the central
Himalaya is actually bracing for the ‘big one’,
according to seismologists. The added cost of constructing
a dam resistant to the strongest upheavals of the earth must
be a part of dam economics, and plains politicians must consider
that a Himalayan dam collapse would kill mostly plains people.
The reasonable plan of action
for rivers that the locals consider as sacred watercourses
is for the dam-builders not to touch them, and for the inhabitants
to raise a storm that makes it impossible to sink a single
pylon at the site. The same holds true for river systems whose
degradation would be a loss of species or habitat on a regionwide
scale. It is also important to decide to leave some rivers
free of structures for the sake of esthetics and recreation.
But it will be foolish to believe that dams and run-of-river
schemes will not be built on most mountain rivers –
if not the outsider, ultimately, local forces themselves will
move to construct them.
It is also time to learn to
reject a high dam for reasons based on sound economics, as
happened in the case of the Arun-III project in Nepal more
than a decade ago, when environmental activism was a sideshow
and the World Bank as the lead agency was forced to back out
because it could not defend itself against the economic challenge
to the projections. Challenging the projects on economic and
political grounds can only make the fight against dams more
sustainable.
Practical rejectionism
Those who propose engineering solutions to Southasia’s
water woes – including building reservoirs to hold back
flood water – forget what by now should be a basic understanding:
Himalayan waters carry silt. This is not as a result of upstream
erosion, but as a matter geological fact – Southasian
mountains erode and generate silt. But dam-building technology
and its related ideology were developed during the 19th and
20th centuries in Europe and North America, where the rivers
carry minimal silt load. The ease with which a dam is proposed
in the countries of the north has been transferred through
engineering schools to the dam builders of Southasia.
Today, every embanked river
of the central Himalaya stands as mute testimony to an engineering
folly that should teach us not to reach too quickly for high
dams in our highlands. Meant to contain the river waters during
the monsoon and prevent flooding, the levees also keep floodwaters
outside the embankments from draining, leading to catastrophic
waterlogging. Meanwhile, the state of the Kosi’s watercourse,
locked in between embankments constructed a half-century ago,
should give pause to the technocrats who might want to leap
ahead and start pouring the concrete in just about every river
valley they espy.
The silt carried down by the
Kosi has deposited itself between the embankments, whereas
earlier the flood would have spread this silt across the landscape.
Every year, when the river bed rose very high, the Kosi would
shift course. Now, the deposits of five decades of silt and
sand have meant that the riverbed is up to four metres higher
than the outlying, densely populated plains of Purnea in Bihar.
Allow one massive cloudburst upstream, and a break at a crucial
point in the embankment, and the Kosi would not only change
course but change the course of history and the map of the
Subcontinent.
The Kosi Barrage at least
is located on the Nepal-India border, and Indian engineers
would ultimately be answerable for a disaster downstream.
The same process of siltation is also affecting the Farraka
barrage on the Ganga, and this repeat of engineering folly
will in all likelihood create a breach that would have massive
humanitarian repercussions across the border in Bangladesh.
Boys will be boys, and engineers
will be engineers. Not having learnt from the mistakes made
in constructing dams, reservoirs and embankments in the past,
nor of impoverishment from waterlogging and salination, or
of the failure of rehabilitation, the Indian national establishment
has been brash enough to promote the idea of a gigantic river-linking
scheme that would rope in not only India, but the neighbours.
The breath-taking ability to propose such a scheme should
give pause to anyone who believes that lessons have been learnt
and that dam-building in Southasia is now a ‘science’.
Indeed it is not, for unless the issues of social sciences,
of equity, marginalisation, identity, and agency are taken
into account, big dams will remain toys of the powerful rather
than a tool for upliftment.
White water to gold
There will ultimately be many reasons never to build engineering
works on certain rivers. These include issues of protection
of endangered species, seismic risks, and the overwhelming
cultural and religious significance of certain river valleys.
More than any other, the reason to resist a dam that comes
with a reservoir is that the rehabilitation of the ‘oustees’
is bound to be botched. History has shown us that this is
so.
There will be instances where
thousands will be displaced and need to be relocated from
any particular dam site in order to benefit the hundreds of
thousands downstream. But this logic has been turned on its
head by the power plays in the existing political economy
and the near-absolute failure of oustee rehabilitation. As
such, it is impossible to believe that pious promises of rehabilitation
made today will be kept tomorrow; and India’s record
on rehabilitation in particular is a shame on a global scale.
On this, the answer is straightforward: a foolproof rehabilitation
package, acceptable to an informed oustee community, is a
must before even the first spade hits the ground at a dam
site. The provision for penalties against involved individuals
and institutions is required to ensure that rehabilitation
finally lives up to its commitment all over Southasia.
When all is said and done,
with the surging economy of the entire region, it is a given
that high dams will invade the highlands of Southasia. It
is important, therefore, to resist where the need is felt,
but also important not to stick one’s head into the
silt of knee-jerk rejectionism. The power of the political-technocratic-industrial
complex is so strong that the average mountain community will
not be able to resist unless organised with the combined tools
of politics, community activism, economics and engineering.
Those who believe that a dam should never be built must have
the right to express their rejection. But even there, it may
be wise to have a fallback position when a dam, in any case,
does gets built. The communities may lose the river, but they
should be able to recoup fair price.
The market, as it is understood
by the leaders of government, business and bureaucracy, must
be challenged with the real value of rushing as well as stored
water. Today, a second generation of activism and scholarship
is germinating, and propelling the discourse. In the future,
a project must first justify itself on economic logic, rather
than on the flawed calculations of ‘tied aid’,
and greed of corrupt politicians, administrators, kickback
merchants and contractors. If a high dam is to be built with
all the conditions in place, it still must pay market value
– as defined by the emergent discourse – for the
water and energy that is stored and for the downstream benefits
that accrue. Only then can Southasia’s white water be
considered white gold.
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