A new report by the NGO, International Rivers, takes an in-depth look at the role China is playing in building mega-dams worldwide. According to the report, Chinese companies are involved in 308 hydroelectric projects across 70 nations.
This April, the Philippines had one of their warships locked in a stand-off over fishing rights with two Chinese surveillance vessels at Scarborough Shoal, in waters claimed both by China and the Philippines.
In recent weeks, militants in Pakistan have escalated their hostile rhetoric toward India. The subject of their ire is water.
A dispute over Central Asian water resources risks provoking military conflict in the former Soviet region, Uzbek President Islam Karimov said on Friday, in a stinging criticism of plans by neighbouring states to dam rivers for hydropower projects.
Marseille, France, 13 March 2012 – Cross-border water management not only benefits water security but it also promotes dialogue, peace and cooperation – even in geopolitically unstable regions, according to IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature).
Indian Ocean Rising: Maritime Security and Policy Challenges. Washington, D.C.: Stimson.
Environmental Change and Ripples for Water Security in Southern Asia. Centre for NTS Studies.
Cooperation from Strength. The United States, China and the South China Sea. Washington, DC: CNAS.
The New Great Walls. A Guide to China’s Overseas Dam Industry. Second edition. Berkeley: International Rivers.
Singapore a Global Hydrohub: From Water Insecurity to Niche Water Diplomacy. RSIS Commentaries. Singapore: RSIS.
Water and energy dynamics in the Greater Himalayan region: opportunities for environmental peacebuilding. Oslo: Norwegian Peacebuilding Resource Centre.
World’s top 10 rivers at risk. WWF International. Gland, Switzerland.