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Salween River

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Map of the Salween watershed
Map of the Salween watershed
Salween River Delta, October 1994

The Salween River (Burmese: သံလ္ဝင္‌မ္ရစ္‌; IPA: [θànlwìn myiʔ]; also spelled Salwine) rises in Tibet, after which it flows through Yunnan, where it is known as the Nujiang river (Chinese: 怒江; pinyin: Nù Jiāng), although either name can be used for the whole river. The river is 2815 km long. It then leaves China and meanders through Myanmar (where it is known as the Thanlwin) and Thailand on its way to emptying in the Andaman Sea by Mawlamyaing (Moulmien).

For most of its route the river is of little commercial value, and it passes through deep gorges and is often called China's Grand Canyon. It is home to over 7,000 species of plants and 80 rare or endangered animals and fish. Unesco said this region "may be the most biologically diverse temperate ecosystem in the world" and designated it a World Heritage Site in 2003.

The Nu people (Chinese: 怒族; pinyin: nù zú), one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognized by the People's Republic of China, are named after this river.

Dams

The Salween is the longest undammed river in mainland Southeast Asia. Proposals to build several dams along it, mainly in Myanmar, are controversial.

On April 1, 2004, the Chinese premier halted the construction of 13 dams on the Nu (Salween) in Yunnan province.

In October, 2006, Chinese water resources minister Wang Shucheng indicated high-level disapproval of the plan to build a string of large dams on the Nu as it flows through the Three Parallel Rivers National Park in Yunnan province.

Mr. Wang said concerns related to the park - parts of which were designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2003 - as well as "downstream national interests," made it impossible to continue with the original plan. However he added that the status quo of no dams on South-east Asia's largest free-flowing river is not an option either. [1]

There is some controversy over the representation of local opinion in the media. Investigative journalist Liu Jianqiang found little support for the dam projects among locals, who feared they would not get adequate compensation. [2]

The Thai and Myanmar governments are planning to build several dams. One is said to be larger than the widely controversial Three Gorges Dam. On April 5, 2006 the Thai and Myanmar governments signed a 6 billion USD agreement to build the Ta Sang dam.

Another Thai-Myanmar project is for the Hatgyi Dam. A feasibility survey was started in May 2006, but was abandoned until sometime in 2007, due to a military offensive by the State Peace and Development Council against Karen people in the area. The dam's builder, the Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand, had hoped to have the feasibility study completed by April 2006, with construction to start in November 2007.

Further reading

References