Regional Cooperation Programme for Sustainable Development of Water and Related Resources in the Mekong Basin
Applying IWRM at basin scale
Olivier Cogels, CEO, Mekong River Commission, October 2005
Need for sustainable development and regional cooperation in the Mekong Basin
The people of the Mekong Basin are amongst the poorest in the world with many existing on less than one dollar per day. If we are to achieve the millennium goals of halving the poverty level by the year 2015 and improving the welfare of the Mekong Basin’s people, we must look at ways of making optimum and sustainable use of the basin’s biggest resource – its water. Tens of millions of people in the Mekong Basin rely on the waters of the river system to provide them with their primary source of nutrition and as well their livelihood. Water resources development in a large, international river basin is not without risks and difficulties however, we believe that the risks of non-development or of insufficient cooperation are even higher. More, but careful, developments and investments are needed in all water related sectors, including hydropower, if escalating demands of the rapidly growing population are to be met. Sustainable development of the economic potential of the Mekong river system for food, for drinking, for sanitation, for power generation, for transportation, and for tourism, is a key to fighting poverty and increasing people’s welfare in the region. Today this development is still in its early stages and the water of the Mekong still offers a high potential for balanced and sustainable water resources development.
In an increasingly global economy, to attain the goals of poverty alleviation and sustainable economic growth in the Mekong region, it is obligatory that regional integration and cooperation are of prime importance. Furthermore, since water does not recognise borders, it is also clear that for water related developments, regional cooperation at the scale of the whole basin is essential. Development in one country may have consequences in another country, and investments in one sector may affect other sectors. Therefore, there is a need for a joint water resources development programme at basin scale, owned and managed by the riparian countries themselves, in close cooperation with the donor community, investment institutions and civil society.
On 5 April 1995, aware of the importance of regional cooperation for water resources development at basin scale, Cambodia, Lao PDR, Thailand and Viet Nam signed the Agreement on the Cooperation for Sustainable Development of the Mekong River Basin. With this agreement the Mekong River Commission (MRC) was created in order to promote and co-ordinate sustainable management and development of water and related resources in the Mekong Basin.
In addition, a dialogue mechanism has been set up with the two upstream countries China and Myanmar. This is a framework of cooperation under which concrete joint activities are undertaken. On 1 April 2002, the MRC and China signed an “Agreement on the Provision of Hydrological Information on the Lancang/Mekong River in Flood Season”. Through this agreement, China contributes effectively to MRC’s flood forecasting activities.
Concrete participation of the upstream countries in MRC’s Mekong Cooperation Programme, in a joint effort to alleviate poverty and increase economical welfare, is a factor of regional integration and is of mutual benefit for all countries sharing the Basin. Cooperation is possible in a pragmatic way through joint identification and implementation of concrete projects in various areas of mutual benefit such as navigation safety and trade facilitation, flood management, environment management and biodiversity conservation, development of modeling and decision support tools, etc.
Promoting Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) at basin scale
The orientation of the Mekong Programme, such as endorsed at the MRC’s 11th Ministerial Council meeting of 8-9 December 2004 in Vientiane, Lao PDR, is to implement Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) at basin scale as a means to alleviate poverty and to enhance economic growth in the scope of the millennium goals.
The concept of Integrated Water Resources Development and Management is not new and has been promoted during the Earth Summit held in Rio De Janeiro in 1992. Later, the Global Water Partnership (GWP) defined IWRM as: “a process which promotes the coordinated development and management of water, land and related resources, in order to maximise the resultant economic and social welfare in an equitable manner without compromising the sustainability of vital ecosystems.” This approach allows for a holistic view of the needs and interests of the countries sharing the river system. With this approach, the MRC believes a well-balanced, equitable and sustainable development process can be facilitated — for the mutual benefit of all Mekong riparian countries.
On this basis, the MRC is currently preparing its Strategic Plan 2006 – 2010, addressing in a holistic way the development needs in the areas of navigation, flood management, fisheries, irrigation, hydropower, environment management, watershed management, tourism, and capacity development.
Facilitating sustainable and balanced investments at basin level
After 10 years of capacity development supported by the international donor community, the MRC has built up strong international expertise and a comprehensive knowledge base, as well as powerful mathematical models and planning tools that can be used to formulate optimal integrated development scenarios for the water resources of the Mekong river system.
A strong environmental monitoring and protection capacity has
also been developed within MRC to protect natural resources,
aquatic life and conditions, and the ecological balance of the
basin from pollution or other harmful effects resulting from
any development plans and uses of water and related resources.
Considerable donor support is now available for flood management
and mitigation, including the development of a regional flood
management and mitigation centre located in Phnom Penh.
The MRC has a proven capacity to manage development programmes
and projects in close partnership with donors, offering them
an efficient environment and platform to turn their development
aid into effective outputs in the region, in line with their
development strategies and objectives.
The Mekong Programme is not only focusing on knowledge management, planning support and environment protection, but is also aiming at facilitating concrete investments and development actions in the field, both structural and non-structural. It is a development programme strongly owned by the Mekong countries themselves. The programme focuses specifically on the development of water and related resources, which can be seen as complementary to the Greater Mekong Subregion Economic Cooperation Programme (GMS), promoted by the Asian Development Bank. The Mekong Programme is also enhanced by other regional initiatives such as the ASEAN Mekong Basin Development Cooperation, and the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP).
Joint planning, management and coordination of the Mekong Programme is achieved in close cooperation with the National Mekong Committees (NMC) and the line agencies of the member countries. The role of the MRC, as an intergovernmental body, is to facilitate coordinated and balanced investments in the basin. Applying the subsidiary principle, its role is not to substitute itself in national and bilateral initiatives, but, on the contrary, to support the countries at the level of strategic planning and programme implementation. MRC is now working to identify, plan and prioritize a broader range of development projects in cooperation with the donor community, investment institutions, and the civil society. MRC’s role in the development process, as an International River Basin Organization (IRBO) owned by its member countries, is very complementary to the role of investment banks. Closer partnership is therefore strongly recommended.
The MRC has to remain a key actor in promoting sustainable economic growth throughout the basin in a move to alleviate poverty. The MRC is in an ideal position to act as a promoter and facilitator of the development and investment process in the water sector in the region, encouraging and coordinating sustainable use and management of water and related resources for navigation, food production, energy production and domestic use. MRC is willing to provide added value to all national and regional initiatives which lead to MRC’s vision of an economically prosperous, socially just and environmentally sound Mekong Basin.
Programme components
The MRC's Mekong Programme is structured in the following sub-programmes:
The sub-programmes are further subdivided into priority subject areas or components under which the MRC projects are implemented. The objectives and components of the various sub-programmes are presented here.
Basin Development Planning
Rationale: Optimal
and equitable development of the Mekong's water resources require
collaborative planning and joint identification of investment
priorities referring to basin-wide strategies in each water-related
sector. This may also be usefully supported by multi-sectoral
analysis and the simulation of various development scenarios
and their effect on the river flow regime.
Objectives: To identify, categorize
and prioritize projects, programmes and investment opportunities,
to seek assistance for and then to implement them at basin level.
Components:
• Planning Capacity and Tools
• Development Strategy and
Investment Plan
• Support to National IWRM
• Project Portfolio Identification
and Promotion
Water Use Management
Rationale: The
1995 Mekong Agreement provides the legal framework enabling
cooperation for sustainable development within the Mekong Basin.
Joint management of water resources requires additional detailed
administrative procedures and technical tools, to be used both
for development planning and for operational management of infrastructure.
Objectives: To provide effective
mechanisms to improve joint water management and ensure mutually
beneficial water utilization in the Lower Mekong River Basin
while maintaining its ecological balance. To develop a computerized
package of hydrological simulation models, knowledge base and
analytical tools to serve as the technical basis for basin development
planning and management. To develop procedures for water use
and management.
Components:
• Basin Modeling and Knowledge
Base
• Environmental and Transboundary
Analysis
• Rules for Water Utilization
• Management and Institutional
Strengthening
Flood Management and Mitigation
Rationale: The
urgent need for improved flood management and mitigation is
reflected by the recurrent damage in the Lower Mekong Basin.
In 2000, more than 800 people died, and the economic damage
was assessed at more than US$400 million. In 2001, more than
300 people died, and the economic damage was assessed at more
than US$100 million. Significant damages where also assessed
in 2002. Since the beginning of the new millennium, millions
of people have been affected by floods. Floodwaters disrupt
road transportation, and, as the population and infrastructure
on the floodplain grows there is the potential for increasing
loss of life and economic damage due to floods. Development
of levees to protect crops and infrastructure as well as construction
of elevated roads less subject to flood impact have the potential
to unintentionally exacerbate flooding elsewhere in the floodplain.
They can also block fish migration routes on the flood plain.
Objectives: To prevent, minimize
or mitigate people’s suffering and economic losses due
to floods, while preserving environmental benefits. To maintain
an accurate flood forecasting system and establish an effective
warning mechanism. To act as a facilitator on transboundary
issues and to build capacity in member countries.
Components:
• Regional Flood Management
and Mitigation Centre
• Structural and Flood Proofing
Measures
• Mediation of Transboundary
Flood Issues
• Flood Emergency Management
Strengthening
• Land Use Management
Environment Management
Rationale: A
fast-growing population, together with increased industrial
and infrastructure development all place competing demands on
resources, it is important that development is managed properly
to ensure that sustainable benefits are spread across the population
and contribute to poverty reduction. The Lower Mekong Basin
is in a fortunate position compared with similar river basins.
Both the water quality and the environmental conditions are
still relatively good and the current development of the Mekong
river is still very limited compared to most other large international
rivers. With generally low levels of industrial activity in
the basin at present, the two immediate concerns about water
quality are diffuse pollution due to poor catchment land management,
and the potential for water quality emergencies arising from
spillages or shipping accidents. Also in the Mekong Delta nutrient
levels in the water are high and rising, presumably due to intensive
agriculture and aquaculture and the wastewater produced by areas
of high population density.
Objectives: To strengthen the
framework for transboundary environmental management by the
four Lower Mekong Basin countries. To generate data, information
and knowledge for decision-making. To balance economic development
and environmental conservation that will benefit the Basin’s
inhabitants.
Components:
• Environmental Monitoring
& Assessment
• Environmental Decision Support
• Environmental Knowledge
• People and Aquatic Ecosystems
• Environmental Flow Management
Fisheries
Rationale: In
the Lower Mekong Basin, floodplains provide benefits for the
livelihoods of tens of millions of people. Much of this floodplain
is subject to a substantial annual wet season flood pulse, which
is crucial to the survival and production of most of the fish
and aquatic animals and many of the plant species in the basin.
The flood recession provides major fishing opportunities as
well as supplying water to the recession rice crop in much of
Cambodia and southern Laos. The Lower Mekong fishery (the world’s
largest freshwater fishery estimated at over two million tonnes
per year, with a total value of around $US 1.4 billion) is dependent
on the annual Mekong flood pulse, which, in turn, is totally
dependent on climatic conditions that vary considerably from
year to year. In many places in the basin, the fishery is one
of the few sources of employment for an increasingly young,
often landless rural population. Unfortunately, population growth
in the existing poor socio-economic environment is placing huge
pressure on this fragile resource.
Objectives: To manage the productive
Mekong fisheries so as to sustain their high yield and economic
output well into the future. To undertake research and training
and to disseminate information to policy makers and planners
in the four Lower Mekong countries.
Components:
• Assessment of Mekong Capture
Fisheries
• Institutional Support
• Aquaculture of Indigenous
Mekong Fish Species
• Management of River and
Reservoir Fisheries
Navigation
Rationale: The
Mekong River is an important gateway to trade centres in the
Southeast Asia region and beyond. In 2001, trade valued at $4,700
million was transported throughout the LMB on the Mekong River
and its tributaries, including the passage of an estimated $88
million of goods between Thailand and Yunnan. Flow regime exercises
an important control on navigability, and changes in flow, either
increases due to regulation or decreases due to diversions,
will influence the viability of navigation. To fully realize
the trade and transport potentials, a regional development approach
is much needed for promoting freedom of navigation and for increasing
the international trade opportunities for Mekong countries’
mutual benefit. Issues to be addressed include river navigation
conditions; ports; integration of navigation with other transport
modes (particularly in the international context); physical
and non-physical barriers to navigation; and environmental and
safety concerns such as pollution.
Objectives: To promote freedom
of navigation on the Mekong, and to increase social development
and international trade opportunities using the navigation potential
of the river system.
Components:
• Socio-economic Analysis
and Regional Transport Planning
• Legal Framework for Cross-border
Navigation
• Traffic Safety and Environmental
Sustainability
• Information, Promotion and
Coordination
• Institutional Development
Hydropower
Rationale: The
total hydropower potential of the Mekong river system is estimated
at 17,000 MW for the tributaries and 13,000 MW for the mainstream.
Only 4,450 MW has been developed to date (1,600 MW in the LMB;
2850 in the Upper Basin). Demand in the LMB is expected to grow
by around 7% per year over the next 20 years, and there are
substantial opportunities for trading of power between the countries
in the region. Hydropower options are included in the power
development strategies of all the Mekong countries. There is
thus still a large hydropower potential that could be developed
in the Mekong region. Obstructions to meeting this potential
include the lack of an effective regional transmission system,
competition from other power sources, and resistance to hydropower
development due to concerns about the impacts of dams on fish
migration and the river flow regime. Storage dams typically
decrease wet season flows and increase dry season flows. Successful
development of the region’s hydropower potential will
require a well structured and integrated programme founded on
a basin-wide strategy, with due regard to environmental and
social aspects.
Objective: To develop hydropower
in order to meet the need for economic development in a way
that fully recognizes the requirement to safeguard ecosystems
and social interests.
Components:
• Mekong Basin Hydropower
Development Strategy
Agriculture, Irrigation and Forestry
Rationale: Agriculture
is still the dominant economic activity in the Lower Mekong
Basin. It accounts for between 20% (in NE Thailand) and 52%
(in Lao PDR) of GDP, providing food for 300 million people in
the world. It provides livelihoods for around 75% of the LMB
population and is an important source of export income. Irrigation
is an integral part of the agricultural production systems.
Wet season irrigation helps to secure the rice crop and dry
season irrigation allows a second (sometimes third) crop and
is increasingly important in the production of high value vegetables,
fruit and industrial crops. As populations in the region are
growing rapidly, irrigation is vital to food security as well
as economic development. Thailand and Vietnam have already developed
a substantial proportion of their irrigable land and water resources
in the LMB. There is still potential for expansion of irrigation,
but more investment is also needed in the improvement of existing
irrigation systems and management capacities aiming at increased
irrigation efficiency and water productivity (“More Crop
per Drop”). During the wet season, water availability
is far in excess of demand, but dry season water shortages are
common, particularly in the Mun- Chi basin and in the Delta,
which is currently responsible for about 50% of Viet Nam’s
total food production. Intrusion of seawater into the Delta
is becoming more and more an issue of concern, reducing the
potential for irrigated rice production. It also affects shallow
wells for domestic use. Deforestation is a significant environmental
concern of all Mekong country governments. There is an urgent
need to preserve the integrity of the watersheds through monitoring
land use changes, identifying problems and management training.
Concerns focus on the loss of biodiversity and livelihoods as
the forests are cleared, as well as the potential impact of
the land-use change on the rivers. Forest clearing can lead
to leaching of nutrients and erosion of sediments into rivers.
The forests of the lower Mekong provide habitats for animals
such as tigers, leopards and elephants, which apart from their
intrinsic and cultural values are the sorts of species that
can provide the basis of developing eco-tourism.
Objectives: To preserve the integrity
of the watersheds of the four countries through monitoring land
use changes, identifying problems and management training. To
implement technical surveys of irrigation practices to improve
efficiency.
Components:
• Irrigation water use efficiency
and productivity
• Watershed Management
Tourism
Rationale: The
tourism industry is already making a significant contribution
to the economies of the member countries. Being blessed with
abundant historical and cultural heritage and unspoiled natural
beauty, the Mekong River Basin has also a great potential to
attract visitors from various parts of the world, generating
more income from foreign exchange. Being a highly labour-intensive
industry, tourism also plays a significant role in generating
employment opportunities to localities where it is promoted.
Objectives: To promote tourism
within the Mekong River Basin in a balanced manner, which also
ensures necessary environmental protection.
Components:
• To be defined
Integrated Capacity Building
Rationale: In
the Mekong region, there is a strong need to develop the technical,
institutional and legal water resources management capacity
and expertise at various levels. Through the development of
a regional training programme, involving a network of leading
education and training institutions in the region and worldwide,
it is also expected to increase regional cooperation and integration.
Objective: To strengthen the capacity
of the MRC, the National Mekong Committees and the line agencies
in all fields leading to more effective integrated water resources
development and river basin management
Components:
• Training in Project Management
• Training in Information
Management and Communication
• Training in Environmental
Governance
• Junior Riparian Professional
Programme
• Strengthening Core Activities
of MRC
• Research Coordination
• Gender Mainstreaming
Information Management and Decision Support Systems
Rationale: Integrated
Water Resources Management and Development needs to be supported
by databases and Geographical Information Systems (GIS) in order
to store, analyse, and distribute hydro-meteorological data,
land use data, socio-economic data, administrative data, infrastructure
data, etc. Planning and decision-making require mathematical
simulation models and Decision Support Systems (DSS). During
the past five years, the MRC Secretariat has developed rich
databases and powerful mathematical tools which need further
maintenance and updating, based on an effective international
data management and exchange policy.
Objective: To develop and maintain
the databases and tools to support planning and decision-making.
Components:
• Hydro-meteorological data
collection and analysis
• Information gathering and
integration
• Database management
• Mekong Basin GIS
• Remote Sensing
• Simulation and Decision
Support Systems
• Data Exchange Policy and
Procedures
water and related resources
Some key facts about the Mekong
Table 1: Approximate distribution of MRB water resources by country
Country or Province |
|||||||
Yunnan Provice, PRC | Myanmar | Lao PDR | Thailand | Cambodia | Viet Nam | Mekong River Basin | |
Catchment area as % of MRB | 22 | 3 | 25 | 223 | 19 | 8 | 100 |
Average flow (m3/sec) from area | 2410 | 300 | 5270 | 2560 | 2860 | 1660 | 15,060 |
Average flow as % of total | 16 | 2 | 35 | 18 | 18 | 11 | 100 |
Integrated Water Resources Management
The orientation of the Mekong Programme, such as endorsed at the MRC’s 11th Ministerial Council meeting of 8-9 December 2004 in Vientiane, Lao PDR, is to implement Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) at basin scale as a means to alleviate poverty and to enhance economic growth in the scope of the millennium goals.
The concept of Integrated Water Resources Development and Management is not new and has been promoted during the Earth Summit held in Rio De Janeiro in 1992. Later, the Global Water Partnership (GWP) defined IWRM as: “a process which promotes the coordinated development and management of water, land and related resources, in order to maximise the resultant economic and social welfare in an equitable manner without compromising the sustainability of vital ecosystems.” This approach allows for a holistic view of the needs and interests of the countries sharing the river system. With this approach, the MRC believes a well-balanced, equitable and sustainable development process can be facilitated — for the mutual benefit of all Mekong riparian countries.
On this basis, the MRC is currently preparing its Strategic Plan 2006 – 2010, addressing in a holistic way the development needs in the areas of navigation, flood management, fisheries, irrigation, hydropower, environment management, watershed management, tourism, and capacity development.