Wednesday, 03 November 2010
Will Baxter
The Phnom Penh Post
Cambodia  will have a difficult time coping with the enormous loss of fish and  fisheries-based livelihoods if a proposed set of hydropower dams is  constructed on the lower Mekong River – according to a recently released impact study, even if it adheres to expert recommendations.
According to the strategic environmental assessment authorised by the Mekong River Commission and released last month, “Cambodia is the country most exposed to fish losses” among the MRC’s  member countries, which also include Laos, Thailand and Vietnam.
The document says “more than 1 million fisheries-dependent people could lose their livelihoods”  in Cambodia due to impacts from mainstream Mekong dams, and that the  country would have difficulty generating alternative protein sources to  make up for the loss of an estimated 300,000 tonnes of fish per year.
“The  implications of these [fish] losses could be severe for many  fishery-dependent families and for the whole food security of Cambodia,  since more than 50 percent of all protein consumed in the country are  from Mekong fish,” said Eric Baran, senior research  scientist at the WorldFish Centre in Cambodia, a key consultant on the  environmental assessment.

 






 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
0 comments:
Post a Comment