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Sinica Podcast

China's hydro dam ambitions and their consequences

Sinica Podcast

Kaiser Kuo

Culture, China News, Hangzhou, Chinese, International Relations, Chongqing, Beijing, Sichuan, Currentaffairs, China, Politics, Chengdu, Shanghai, Guangzhou, China Economy, News, China Politics, Business, Film, Shenzhen

4.8 • 676 Ratings

🗓️ 12 July 2018

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Hydropower dams are a source of debate in the environmental and international relations communities alike. China has made use of hydropower in the past to supplement its reliance on coal and other energy forms, and in total the country has 40 percent of the world’s large hydro dams. While the power from electricity-producing dams is relatively clean, the construction and placement of the massive pieces of infrastructure has long-term ecological consequences and severe impacts for communities downstream. This week on the Sinica Podcast, Kaiser and Jeremy chat with Stephanie Jensen-Cormier, China Program Director for the NGO International Rivers, about the consequences of China’s aggressive building of large dams and other issues related to rivers in China – and to Chinese involvement in international dam building projects. She shares bad news, but also some surprisingly good news. Recommendations: Stephanie: River of Life, River of Death: The Ganges and India's Future, a book by Richard Mallet that discusses the Ganges’ cultural and economic importance. She also recommends Unbowed: A Memoir by Wangari Maathai, a Kenyan environmentalist and Nobel Laureate who started the Green Belt movement. Kaiser: The audiobook for David Tod Roy’s translation of The Plum in the Golden Vase. The narrator, George Backman, has a perfect voice for the story, and performs it with decent Chinese pronunciation. Jeremy: Mortality, Christopher Hitchens’ last book. Jeremy insists that despite the bleak subject matter, it is a good, short, and enjoyable read. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Cynica podcast, the weekly discussion of current fares in China, produced in partnership with SubChina.

0:14.6

SubChina is the best way to stay on top of the latest news from China in just a few minutes a day.

0:19.4

Just to subscribe to our free email newsletter

0:21.9

assembled under the editorial direction of Mr. Jeremy Goldhorn. Better yet, signing up for our

0:26.9

premium membership program, SubChina Access, and get all sorts of bonus goodies, discounts

0:32.0

events, and free entry to live cynical tapings, and the chance to harass Jeremy and me and Anthony

0:37.0

Tao and all the rest of the

0:38.0

editorial team on our Slack channel. Joins for chats there also with special guests. I'm Kai Zhigua and I'm in

0:44.6

Beijing today at my mom's house on Mutton Alley in the as yet unhypstified houtongs of Xichung district.

0:51.5

Joining me from 13 time zones away in Nashville, Tennessee is Jin Yu Mi.

0:55.5

How are you, Jeremy?

0:56.5

Oh, oh, right.

0:57.6

Beijing wanted me to say hi.

0:59.6

All 22 million of us.

1:01.7

You know, for obvious reasons, they miss the hijinks of what it's more infamous foreigners.

1:06.3

Well, tell all of them hello from me and that I missed them.

1:10.7

And of course, I miss lovely Beijing.

1:12.3

Well, let's jump right in because this is a really fascinating topic today.

1:14.9

So anyone who has studied China at all has inevitably learned a fair bit about China's rivers.

1:20.3

The civilization was, after all, born on the floodplains of the Yellow River.

1:23.8

The first imperial dynasty, the Qin built its power in the natural stronghold,

1:27.9

that is the valley of the Wei River, the Yangtze or the Changjong,

...

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