Photo Essays

4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

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4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

Firsthand glimpses of how dam construction changed the river over the course of eight years.

4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

Infrastructure construction on the upper Mekong, 2011, with a Tibetan village on the far bank.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

A gravel crusher on the upper Mekong, 2011, with Tibetan houses on the opposite bank.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

The upper Mekong diverted through tunnels, Huangdeng dam site, 2014.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

The upper Mekong emerging from a diversion tunnel, Huangdeng dam construction site, 2014.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

The completed Huangdeng dam, 2019. I was unable to get a frontal shot after being apprehended by police.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

The back of the 203-meter Huangdeng dam, and the start of its 1.6 billion cubic meter reservoir, 2019.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

Lidi dam construction site, 2014.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

The completed 75-meter Lidi dam, 2019.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

The back side of Lidi dam, and its reservoir, 2019.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

Looking north to the 137-meter Wunonglong dam, 2019.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

Wunonglong dam, close-up, 2019.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

Back of the Wunonglong dam, and its reservoir, 2019.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

Beginning construction on the Tuoba dam, 2019.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

The upper Mekong as reservoir, 2019.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

A relocation settlement for displaced Tibetan villagers, on the Mekong north of the Lidi dam, 2019.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

The upper Mekong as reservoir, 2019.

Credit: Scott Ezell
4 Dams on the Upper Mekong in Yunnan, China: 2011-2019

The upper Mekong as reservoir, 2019.

Credit: Scott Ezell

These photos document the construction of four dams – from north to south, Wunonglong, Lidi, Tuoba, and Huangdeng (see map below) – along a 200-kilometer stretch of the upper Mekong in Yunnan, China, and the transformation of the river from a free-flowing current to a series of stagnant reservoirs. These hydropower projects are part of a larger transnational movement to build hundreds of dams on the Mekong and its tributaries, including the Nam Tha in Laos.

In 2011, I trekked along the upper Mekong from Deqen south through Tibetan and Lisu villages. The river was braided copper and bronze, churning between talus banks. Dams existed on the Mekong further south in Yunnan, but here it ran unimpeded. Construction of infrastructure and access roads for the dams had begun, however, and clouds of yellow dust rose up where earth machines raked open the valley walls.

In 2014, I walked and hitchhiked north along the Mekong starting from Yingpan, to document the dams’ construction. The river had been diverted so scaffoldings and concrete walls could be built across the riverbed, but it still flowed uninterrupted. The construction zones were remote from official security concerns and I passed freely through the area. Villages along the river were being evacuated, with local people forcibly resettled to long blocks of concrete barracks antithetical to the organic organization and architecture of traditional villages.

In 2019, I returned to photograph the completed dams. I set out walking from Yingpan, but before I reached the Huangdeng dam I was picked up by police, who expelled me back to the county seat of Lanping. I circled far north to Weixi, and accessed the Mekong at Weideng. There I rented a motorcycle and spent three days riding north and south to the dam sites. The Huangdeng, Lidi, and Wunonglong dams were complete, with a combined reservoir capacity of 2 billion cubic meters. The Mekong was blocked and bloated, looking alternatively like a swollen dead worm or a broad lifeless lake.

Are the dams on the upper Mekong a far-sighted effort to secure a supply of water and electricity against future need? Or, considering the devastating downstream social and environmental effects of these dams, are they part of a strategy to develop a “hydraulic empire,” maintaining regional power through control over access to water, while also relocating and assimilating minority peoples?

Time will tell. For now, these photos offer a glimpse the upper Mekong before and during the construction of these dams, and of the series of static reservoirs it has become.

Dams along the mainstream of the Mekong River. Map by the Stimson Center, reprinted with permission.

 

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