Lupa Kata Sandi? Klik di Sini

atau Masuk melalui

Belum Memiliki Akun Daftar di Sini


atau Daftar melalui

Sudah Memiliki Akun Masuk di Sini

Konfirmasi Email

Kami telah mengirimkan link aktivasi melalui email ke rudihamdani@gmail.com.

Klik link aktivasi dan dapatkan akses membaca 2 artikel gratis non Laput di koran dan Majalah Tempo

Jika Anda tidak menerima email,
Kirimkan Lagi Sekarang

China Changes Tack on Water Politics

25 March 2024 13:07 WIB

By: Fengshi Wu, Associate Professor in Political Science and International Relations at the School of Social Sciences, UNSW Sydney.

Long a source of tension with its neighbours, China’s transboundary rivers are opening opportunities for regional cooperation.

Sixteen major rivers originate in China that supply fresh water to nearly 3 billion people in 14 Asian countries – more than a third of the world’s population.

 As 'Asia’s water tower', China has often been depicted as the upstream bully when it comes to water politics – taking what it needs for itself with little consideration for its downstream neighbours. 

But with the growing connection between sustainable development and regional stability, China has an opportunity to use transboundary water management as a springboard for regional peace and cooperation. 

Its success will depend not just on navigating diplomacy with many neighbouring states, but also on the unpredictable course of the US-China rivalry, as China looks to lead the world in renewable energy production. 

Clean energy industries are re-adjusting their global strategies to be more in sync with international political alliances. And global mineral markets and supply chains have shifted, with China recently limiting exports of strategic rare earth minerals.

At the same time, transboundary water management and hydropower development are becoming integrated into security, political and economic negotiations among riparian states – part of an emerging "security-sustainability nexus".

For China, this scenario presents challenges to its aspirations to create and oversee platforms for regional cooperation. 

Neighbouring states are under immense pressure to bring economic growth to large populations — and to do so with clean energy.

Hydropower — harnessing the immense potential of these rivers — could be their ticket.

Since the 2016 implementation of the UNFCCC Paris Agreement, many countries in the region are facing increased pressure to phase out fossil fuels and invest in hydropower development. 

Various domestic clean energy demands and complicated geopolitical positions, diplomatic histories and political cultures mean that China might make a better partner for some than for others.

Since landmark protests in Thailand 2004 against a proposed dam project in southwestern China, environmental activists and campaigners from four lower Mekong countries — Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam — have often rallied together to halt the construction of hydropower plants and dams on the upper stream Mekong (Lancang jiang in Chinese) inside China. 

The protests also marked the beginning of Chinese environmental NGOs joining transnational coalitions against the construction of large dams in China.

But in recent years, due to domestic energy demands, lower Mekong region states have collaborated with China in developing hydropower projects on the river. 

Some of the authoritarian states in the region, despite being highly sensitive to public protests, have allowed environmentalists and non-governmental organisations to protest against dams invested in by Chinese capital and built in neighbouring countries. 

The Xayaburi dam in Laos and Sanakham dam project in Thailand are cases in point. 

The situation is even more intense between China and India. 

Diplomatic skirmishes related to transboundary water resource management have sometimes been referred to by observers as “water wars”. Since the establishment of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, India has frequently accused China of interfering in India-Pakistan water disputes.

A decade ago, research pointed out that China’s water diplomacy had remained underdeveloped or ineffective due to institutional constraints at both domestic and international levels.

At home, transboundary river basins, lakes, and other water resources are viewed by the Chinese state as having different economic functions such as agricultural irrigation, hydroelectric generation, fishery and shipping. As a result, they are managed on a piecemeal basis by various state agencies. 

The field of transnational water management, much like other non-traditional security policy areas such as refugee and irregular migration, lacks a designated regulatory agency or unified legal-political framework.  Disputes and collaborations are handled individually, depending on the specific geopolitical factors, without any cross-referencing. 

In other words, what works for the Lancang-Mekong region may not be applicable to China and Kazakhstan's collaboration on the Ili River. 

At the international level, China’s involvement in multilateral water and environmental cooperation remained extremely limited until the 2000s. 

China was never a member of the Mekong Committee, which ran from 1957 to 1995, and only became a 'Dialogue Partner' of its successor,  the Mekong River Commission, in 1996. The five lower Mekong countries invited India and formed the Mekong-Gonga Cooperation in 2000. As a result, there was a diplomatic lapse in China’s governance of transnational waters. 

Fast forward to 2024, and this lapse has been significantly improved. The constraints in China’s transboundary water and environmental resource management have been largely alleviated. 

Although there is still no single designated state agency to coordinate China’s water diplomacy across regions, the Foreign Ministry and international-facing agencies are much more present, compared to a decade ago. 

In the case of the Mekong, China finally created its own platform for international cooperation — the Lancang-Mekong Cooperation — in 2017, highlighting its upstream geopolitical standing, rather than shying away from it. 

This is the second year into the second  Five-Year Plan of Action on Lancang-Mekong Cooperation (2023-2027). Cooperation in transboundary water conservation and management is included on a long list of comprehensive actions planned, including high-level political-security dialogue, trade and finance, disaster prevention, transnational crime, reduction of poverty and economic development, energy and more.

In the case of the Ili, Irtysh and other rivers that connect to Central Asia waterways, China has negotiated broadly with relevant parties, including Russia. 

Utilising a few key multilateral spaces, either initiated by China (Shanghai Cooperation Organization) or friendly to China (Eurasia Economic Union), China has tagged water and hydropower projects along with other types of development cooperation in the region, such as farming and rural development, transportation and infrastructure building and smart grid and energy system.

And since the launch of the Belt and Road Initiative in 2013, transboundary water and environmental resource management related to Southeast Asia, Central Asia and parts of South Asia has been quickly streamlined, repackaged and integrated into multifaceted, large-scale projects of development, clean energy and capacity building. 

For example, China has been training professionals in water conservation and hydropower in many ASEAN countries directly or not linked to the Mekong river basin. 

Compared with traditional intergovernmental cooperation and negotiations, these may be more incremental initiatives, but they are aimed at building new foundations and consensus for long-term cooperation.

Originally published under Creative Commons by 360info™.

*) DISCLAIMER

Articles published in the “Your Views & Stories” section of en.tempo.co website are personal opinions written by third parties, and cannot be related or attributed to en.tempo.co’s official stance.



Gibran Reveals Plans to Meet With Several Politicians

3 hari lalu

Gibran Reveals Plans to Meet With Several Politicians

Vice-President elect Gibran Rakambuming Raka is planning to meet with several high-ranking political figures.


Top 10 Fish-Producing Countries in the World

4 hari lalu

Top 10 Fish-Producing Countries in the World

List of the 10 largest fish producing countries in the world. The latest data and interesting facts are presented in a short summary.


Global Military Spending Hits All-Time High in 2023, Israel Records 24% Jump

4 hari lalu

Global Military Spending Hits All-Time High in 2023, Israel Records 24% Jump

Global military expenditure in 2023 reached a record high at US$2,443 billion or around Rp39.66 quadrillion, led by United States, China, and Russia.


Indonesia, China Agree to Form Team for Jakarta-Surabaya High-Speed Train Development

4 hari lalu

Indonesia, China Agree to Form Team for Jakarta-Surabaya High-Speed Train Development

Indonesia and China had agreed to form a team handling the development of the Jakarta-Surabaya high-speed train project.


Today's Top 3 News: Indonesia-China Relations Will Get Stronger Under the Next Govt

4 hari lalu

Today's Top 3 News: Indonesia-China Relations Will Get Stronger Under the Next Govt

Here is the list of the top 3 news on Tempo English today.


Indonesia-China Relations Will Get Stronger Under the Next Govt, Minister Says

5 hari lalu

Indonesia-China Relations Will Get Stronger Under the Next Govt, Minister Says

Coordinating Minister Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan expressed belief that Indonesia-China relations would get stronger under the next government.


Prabowo Meets China Foreign Affairs Minister to Discuss Enhancing Defense Cooperation

8 hari lalu

Prabowo Meets China Foreign Affairs Minister to Discuss Enhancing Defense Cooperation

Prabowo said that China is a close partner of Indonesia as the two countries have long enjoyed close bilateral ties, especially in the defense sector.


Root Cause of Middle East Instability is Palestine Issue, Says Indonesian Minister

8 hari lalu

Root Cause of Middle East Instability is Palestine Issue, Says Indonesian Minister

Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi called on parties involved in the Middle East conflict to exercise restraint and promptly de-escalate.


China Foreign Minister Wang Yi Meets Prabowo After Talks with Jokowi

8 hari lalu

China Foreign Minister Wang Yi Meets Prabowo After Talks with Jokowi

China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi paid a visit to Indonesian Defense Minister Prabowo Subianto at the latter's office in Jakarta today, April 18.


Indonesia, China Support Palestine's UN Membership

8 hari lalu

Indonesia, China Support Palestine's UN Membership

Indonesia and China have pledged to support Palestine's full membership in the United Nations (UN) during a joint press conference in Jakarta.