Showing posts with label Water. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Water. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

ENERGY: Armenia's Greens Take On Hydro-Schemes. Too many dams will dry up rivers downstream, they warn. By Gayane Mkrtchyan (iwpr.net)


(iwpr.net) Armenia lacks oil and gas reserves and is trying to develop hydroelectric power as a way of reduce its reliance on fuel imports. Ecologists, however, say that damming up rivers destroys waterways and the unique ecosystems they support.

Environmentalists in Armenia say a strategy of building multiple hydroelectric stations to harness the country’s rivers is storing up problems for the future

In one recent case of direct action, environmental activists joined residents of the village of Marts in the northern Lori region on November 17 to protest against plans to build a third power station on a river there. They blocked a major highway, causing traffic chaos, but left before police could arrive to disperse them.

“Rivers are being turned into pipelines,” Levon Galstyan of the All-Armenian Ecological Front told IWPR. “No public consultations were organised in the village [Marts], and people’s interests have been ignored.”

Liparit Simonyan, director of Martz Energy, the company in charge of the dam project, said its activities were entirely within the law.

“There’s a sense that it isn’t the locals protesting, but a group of activists representing some outside forces. They are spreading false information and setting people against one another other,” Simonyan told reporters.

“We are spending money; we are creating jobs,” he added.

Robert Galstyan, the village head in Marts, confirmed that the company was going to employ seven locals and had promised to provide the village with street lighting and a mains gas supply.

Karen Harutiunyan, an activist from the environmentalist group 100 Point, said claims of public consultation were untrue since the majority of local residents were clearly against the scheme.

In a separate development, villagers in the western Aragatsotn region turned out to protest against work on a fourth power station on the river Amberd.

Local resident Sasun Hayrapetyan told IWPR that villagers in the area would lose their water supplies.

“This hydropower station is being built next to us without any consultation,” she added.

Armenia has gone from having just 11 small hydroelectric power plants in 1997 to 137, with another 77 being built. It also has bigger plants arranged in two series or “cascades” – Sevan-Hrazdan and Vorotan.

The construction drive is underpinned by a 2004 law which assumes that dams on mountain rivers could meet around 30 per cent of Armenia’s electricity needs.

That is still some way away. As Aram Gabrielyan, head of electricity supplies at the energy ministry, points out, nuclear power provided 28 per cent of the country’s power last year, 42 per cent was generated by gas-fired stations, and most of the rest by hydroelectric plants.

Galstyan said the government’s strategy was all wrong.

“Construction of hydroelectric power stations has reached such a level that in 20 or 30 years’ time, this state will be facing a social and ecological catastrophe,” he said. “There will be power stations on 90 per cent of rivers, and in the dry season they will all dry up.”

Inga Zarafyan of Ecolur agreed that the threat was real, warning that “the number of sick rivers is constantly rising”.

“Twelve power stations have been built on the river Yeghegis, another nine are to be built on the Meghri river, and six more on the Getik and Marts, and also on rivers that feed Lake Sevan,” she told IWPR. “The biggest is being built on the Argichi, with nine kilometres of pipes and four ten-megawatt turbines. We are scared to imagine what will be left of that river.”

Inessa Gabayan, national coordinator of an Armenian-Norwegian project to develop small hydroelectric power plants, urged local residents to contribute constructively rather than just objecting to them.

“The aim of our project is to identify problems and secure stable development in this sector. I believe new technologies can resolve the problems,” she told IWPR.

Gayane Mkrtchyan is a reporter with Armenianow.com

Friday, July 10, 2009

GEOPOLITIC: The Forgotten South Caucasus: Where Oil and Water Mix (circleofblue.org)

A "New Great Game" of Geopolitical Control Surfaces in Russia’s Old Backyard

by Nadya Ivanova

Maps by Hannah Nester and Eric DaighCircle of Blue

Almost 20 years after Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan bounced back to full national sovereignty following decades of Soviet control, the winds of change in the South Caucasus have largely faded, leaving behind a region whose geopolitical identity and long-term stability remain uncertain. Once off the radar of Soviet geopolitical analyses, water management problems are now emerging as a cross-cutting issue critical to the stability of volatile regional relations and delicate geopolitical dynamics in the area.
It is often assumed that competition for water will trigger conflict. But in the South Caucasus — a globally strategic corner of the world where Russia, Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Central Asia converge — a proposal to clean up and share management of the region’s largest river basin could well serve as a new route to political stability. And the consequences, diplomats and scientists say, could have strategic importance far beyond – to Europe, Russia, and the United States.


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