By LAURA FITZPATRICK Tuesday, Dec. 08, 2009

China doesn't do anything small. And it's the massive scale of the
series of electricity-generating dams it began building on one of the
world's great rivers, the Mekong, in 1986 that is worrying observers
downriver. A May report by the U.N. Environment Program and the Asian
Institute of Technology warned that China's plan for at least eight
dams could present a "considerable threat" to the river — and by
extension to some 60 million people in Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand and
Laos who depend on it for water, food and transportation. A petition
presented to the Prime Minister of Thailand in June bore more than
16,000 signatures, including those of subsistence farmers and
fishermen fearing for their livelihoods. But critics' objections have
been muted, some analysts said, by China's ascendance on the world
stage — and undermined by plans for Laos, Cambodia and Thailand to
build dams of their own.

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