Jakarta Globe – AFP, July 7, 2013
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In this photograph taken on May 29, 2013, a Buddhist temple sits near an electricity grid main of the Chukha hydro power station in south-eastern Bhutan. (AFP Photo/Roberto Schmidt) |
Chukha,
Bhutan. Home to meditating monks and Himalayan nomads, the sleepy kingdom of
Bhutan has set its sights on becoming an unlikely energy powerhouse thanks to
its abundant winding rivers.
Hydropower
plants have already harnessed the country’s water flows to light up nearly
every Bhutanese home, generating electricity that is sent to remote villages by
cables strung through rugged mountain terrain.
It is a
rapid transformation for the long isolated nation, where less than a quarter of
households had electricity in 1999 – the same year Bhutan became the last
country to introduce television.
But the
kingdom now has much greater ambitions for renewable hydropower – already its
biggest export – which it hopes will provide more than half of its gross
domestic product by the end of the decade.
“It is the
white gold for Bhutan today,” said Chhewang Rinzin, managing director of
state-owned Druk Green Power Corporation, which runs the country’s hydropower
sector.
Bhutan’s
first megaproject, opened in the southwestern Chukha district in the 1980s, is
now one of four major plants which between them have almost 1,500 megawatt
capacity – at peak output roughly equivalent to a large nuclear power station,
and only five percent of Bhutan’s hydropower potential.
Already
going far beyond domestic needs in summer months, when monsoon rains fill up
the rivers, most of the electric power is sold to India, Bhutan’s giant
energy-hungry neighbor.
In
cooperation with the Indian government, and funded by its grants and loans, the
kingdom is now aiming to reach capacity of 10,000 megawatts by 2020 through the
building of 10 new plants.
In
contrast, politically deadlocked and once war-wracked Nepal has just 700
megawatts of installed capacity, despite being among the top potential
hydropower producers in the world according to the World Bank.
“India we
see as a market that cannot be satisfied,” Rinzin said of the demand for
Bhutan’s natural resource, which is driving economic growth estimated by the
Asian Development Bank at 8.6 percent this year.
While
hydropower is hailed as the country’s ticket to self-sufficiency after years of
depending on donors, there are reservations about the speed and scale of its
development while other sectors of the economy lag behind.
One of the
first new plants being built, the Punatsangchhu I project, is projected to cost
about two billion dollars – more than Bhutan’s total gross domestic product.
And there are nine more projects to complete.
“While no
one disputes that harnessing hydropower energy is the way to go, there is
concern that Bhutan is trying to do too much, too soon,” said an April
editorial in the national Kuensel newspaper, titled “Drowning in hydropower”.
At the
Chukha plant, colourful murals depicting the Buddha’s life-cycle contrast with
the whirring machinery but hint at the country’s unique development model of
pursuing “Gross National Happiness” (GNH).
Retaining
Bhutan’s Buddhist cultural identity and protecting the environment are key
parts of the GNH philosophy, which aims to balance the financial advancement of
the nation with spiritual well-being.
The
existing hydropower schemes are all “run of the river” sorts that depend on
natural water supplies rather than large reservoirs, designed to cause less
disruption to their surroundings.
But three
reservoir dams have been proposed among the upcoming projects to ensure
plentiful water in the rain-free and freezing winter months, when power output
currently drops by about three-quarters.
Rinzin says
Bhutan’s steep and sparsely-populated valleys will suffer much less impact than
areas affected by big Indian or Chinese reservoirs – the number of households
displaced is in the hundreds rather than thousands.
But Samir
Mehta, South Asia program director at US-based watchdog International Rivers,
expressed concern at a lack of transparency around the proposals and their
impact. “The level of public engagement is not known,” he said.
He warned
that hydropower plants also face serious threats from climate change, given
Bhutan’s susceptibility to floods from lakes formed high in the mountains by
melting glaciers.
In the
capital Thimphu, people have other concerns on their mind about hydropower’s
rise, sometimes described as “jobless growth”.
Despite its
dominance in Bhutan, Druk Green has a staff of only 1,800, expected to rise to
no more than 6,000, in a country where unemployment is a growing worry among
its youthful population of 736,000.
The
construction phase is more labor-intensive, but only 10 to 15 percent of these
jobs are going to the Bhutanese by Rinzin’s calculation, as most of the
building work is carried out and overseen by Indians.
“It’s money
in and money out,” said Tenzing Lamsang, editor of The Bhutanese newspaper.
“Your own companies are not making the money that they should.”
The
kingdom, which is holding its second parliamentary elections after shifting to
democracy in 2008, is already hugely dependent on India for imports and soaring
demand led it to run out of Indian rupee supplies last year.
Many think
the flurry in hydropower development, and subsequent demand for costly imported
equipment and machinery, exacerbated the crisis.
While he
believes in hydropower’s long-term benefits for Bhutan, Lamsang says the
financial and environmental concerns show that it should not be relied upon to
the cost of other industries.
“The danger
here is that we put all our eggs in one basket. If the basket does fall or
something happens to the basket, then we’re in for a lot of trouble.”
Agence France-Presse
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