|
|
||
It Had to Be YuIn China, Yu Xiaogang is helping locals fight back against dams25 Apr 2006
China has spent decades trying to harness its powerful river systems with dams. Enormous hydroelectric projects, most notably the Three Gorges Dam now under construction on the Yangtze River, have devastated local economies and ecosystems.
Yu Xiaogang.
Photo: Goldman Environmental Prize.
Yu studied the social and environmental impacts of a dam at Lashi Lake for his Ph.D. thesis. He then brought together residents and government officials in the Lashi Lake area to help restore farmland and fisheries, devising programs that eased the desperation of local communities. Yu's work also helped secure restitution for displaced communities, and establish national guidelines for the assessment of dams' social impacts. The Lashi Lake area now serves as an illustration of the true costs of dam-building. In 2003, the Yunnan provincial government announced plans to construct 13 new dams on the Nu River, part of a World Heritage Site. Yu brought villagers from the area to the Mekong River, where they witnessed the legacy of the Manwan Dam, and he helped create a television program on the effects of dams. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao later put the Nu River dams on hold, citing the need for more research and analysis, but the provincial government wants to move forward with a smaller version of the project. Yu, 55, was awarded one of six 2006 Goldman Environmental Prizes at a ceremony in San Francisco on April 24. He spoke to Grist from San Francisco with the occasional assistance of a translator.
Standing on Tiger Leaping Gorge, overlooking the Yangtze River.
Photo: Tom Dusenbery.
For instance, we have an agro-forestry project that plants fruit trees on mountain farmland. That controls erosion and generates income. We also have a microfinance project for women, so they can have some new income sources. Mountain people are far away from political centers and markets, so we contributed some money to help them build a road. We've also tried to maintain the waterway to control floods, so that more land becomes fertile land. We encourage organic agriculture, which has very good production -- some people have increased their income four- to five-fold through organic agriculture.
Goldman Prizewinners
Meet the winners of the 2006 Goldman Environmental Prize:
Silas Kpanan'Ayoung Siakor of Liberia
Yu Xiaogang of China
Olya Melen of Ukraine
Anne Kajir of Papua New Guinea
Craig Williams of the United States
From the very beginning, we think this is the right approach, and that it must have a good result. So we think if we can continue to do this, we'll continue to demonstrate our results and meet our objectives.
|
Also in Grist
The Week's Most Popular
![]() From the Archives
Silas Martyr, by Michelle Nijhuis. Silas Siakor put his life on the line to save Liberia's forests.
The Green Badge of Courage, by Michelle Nijhuis. Meet this year's winners of the Goldman Environmental Prize.
It's All in the List. Our Earth Day nod to the year's goodies, oddities, and inanities.
|
|
You are not logged in. Thus, you cannot post a comment. If you have a Gristmill account, log in below. If you don't have a Gristmill account, well, by all means go make one! Meet you back here in five.