Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 8 – The Chinese
government says that it is prepared to build a 3,000-kilometer-long pipeline to
carry water from Russia’s Lake Baikal to farms, industries, and consumers in
China, something Moscow officials have suggested they are prepared to consider
but that is certain to spark outrage among many Russians.
According to the Chinese plans, the
pipeline will extend from the southwestern banks of Baikal through Mongolia,
across the Gobi Desert into the Xinjian-Uyghur Autonomous district to Lanzhou,
the capital of the Chinese province of Hansu (apn.ru/index.php?newsid=36076).
Russian officials say that environmental impact assessments must be completed
first.
The optics of the plan have already
sparked outrage in both Russia and Mongolia, in the former because of the image
of China sucking Russia try and in the latter because Russian activists and
officials have opposed Mongolian dams on tributaries to Baikal on ecological
grounds but seem indifferent to what China is doing.
But what is most annoying in both
places, the AsiaRussia portal says, is that “the Chinese aren’t afraid of a
rejection by Russia: they don’t even allow the possibility for that.” For
enough money, Moscow will go along, whatever the consequences for Siberia and
the Russian people (asiarussia.ru/blogs/15437/).
There is one
indication that even the Chinese may feel they have overplayed their hand by
making this announcement. After putting up a map showing the pipeline route on
its website on February 17, the Chinese Institute for Water Resources and
Hydrological Research took it down and refused to provide copies to Mongol or Russian
journalists.
And Vang Khao, the director of that
institute, is now saying that it is “too early” to say whether the project will
in fact ever be built.
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