User:Marcus334/Weigyi Dam

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Weigyi Dam
LocationPapun District, Karen State,  Burma
Coordinates18°37′47″N 97°21′39″E / 18.62972°N 97.36083°E / 18.62972; 97.36083
Construction began(MOU) 2005
Opening dateest. ?
Construction costUS$ billions
Owner(s)Myanmar Electric Power Enterprise
Dam and spillways
Type of damDam
ImpoundsSalween River
Height168 m (551.2 ft)
Length0 m (0.0 ft)
Reservoir
Createsreservoir
Surface area640 km2 (247.1 sq mi)
Maximum water depth0 m (0.0 ft)
Power Station
Installed capacity5,800 MW
Annual generationGigawatt hours per year
Website
Weigyi Dam
Nearest cityPegu
ArchitectElectricity Generating Authority of Thailand (EGAT)
Type: A Dam

The Weigyi Dam is one of five proposed hydroelectric dam projects on the Salween River in Burma. It is planned to be in Papun District, Karen State, just across from Mae Sariang District of Mae Hong Son Province in Northern Thailand.[1] This will be the second largest capacity hydrolectric dam in Burma, if completed.

Background[edit]

On December 9, 2005, The Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand (EGAT) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Burma for the development of the dam. The dam is planned to provide electricity forThailand and foreign income for the Burmese Government.

Design[edit]

The planned dam height is 168 m (551 ft) with a maximum water elevation of220 m (720 ft) Amsl. Maximum installed capacity is planned between 4,540 and 5,600 MW. A640 km2 (250 sq mi) reservoir, that will go as far as 400 km (250 mi) to the north[2], will be created by the Dam. The Dagwin Dam, or Lower Salween Dam on the border between Thailand’s Mae Hong Son Province and Burma’s Karen State, is planned to serve as a pumped storage facility for the upriver Weigyi Dam.[3]

Construction[edit]

The Myanmar Electric Power Enterprise and the Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand (EGAT) will jointly manage the project, with possible Chinese collaboration of the Sinohydro Corporation, China Southern Power Grid Company and China Three Gorges Project Corporation. the The Dam's Construction has not yet begun. However, the Htoo Company, with close ties to SPDC Chairman Than Shwe, has been logging the teak forests in the planned reservoir area.[1]

Impact[edit]

28 villages, including the ancient towns of Karenni, Bawlake and Pasaung, will be submerged. Over 30,000 people, including the last remaining 1,000 Yin Ta Lai people, will be displaced from their homeland. Livelihoods will be destroyed and the culture of Karenni people will be devestated, as most of their sacred historical sites will be submerged. The entire remaining population of just 1,000 Yin Ta Lai people will face extinction due to scattering and livelihoods changes caused by displacement. The tribal people who live around the dam site and in the reservoir basin will face forced relocation, land confiscation, human rights abuses and landmine casualties, if the project is implemented as the Lawpita Hydropower Project was. Like Lawpita, the Weigyi dam site is already an active armed conflict zone.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Weigyi Dam". LETTING THE RIVERS RUN FREE. Burma Rivers Network. 2010. Retrieved 7 February 2010.
  2. ^ "Burma: Revival of the Weigyi dam". WRM bulletin No. 67. Montevideo: World Rainforest Movement. February 2003. Retrieved 7 February 2010. {{cite web}}: External link in |work= (help)
  3. ^ "Dagwin Dam, Dam Specifications". LETTING THE RIVERS RUN FREE. Burma Rivers Network. 2010. Retrieved 7 February 2010.

External sources[edit]

  • Damning the Yin Ta La This 13-minute film provides a rare glimpse into the remote heart of Karenni State in eastern Burma and the life of the Yin Ta Lai, of whom only 1,000 remain.