Managing the Rise of a Hydro-Hegemon in Asia: China’s Strategic Interests in the Yarlung-Tsangpo River
This Paper examines the
Sino-Indian water-relations in Yarlung-Tsangpo/Brahmaputra river in order to
suggest policy implications for India. Though the Great Plan to divert water
from the Yarlung-Tsangpo to the Yellow River has been dismissed or ignored by
all legitimate academic institutions in China, it has been reinforced throughout
this Paper that a strong water demand management policy, combined with the
South-to-North Water Diversion Project will be unable to solve the water
shortage crisis of the North China Plain. However, it argues that if national
interest of China demands major water diversion projects in Tibet, it will
undertake such projects if the price of transferred water is cheaper than
conservation or getting water from the sea. Although Chinese scholars have taken
an initiative to cooperate with India on smaller and less contentious water
issues, Beijing has not been transparent to its lower riparians given the fact
that China has started preliminary work on building a 38 gigawatt dam at the
Great Bend of Yarlung-Tsangpo/Brahmaputra. To address China´s position as a
negative hydro-hegemon, a two-step strategy seems appropriate: widen the field
of cooperation with less contentious water issues so that it creates ”spillover”
effect into greater benefits for China, while trying to bring Bangladesh into
the negotiations over the Yarlung-Tsangpo/Brahmaputra.
The Paper examines China´s general performance as a hydro-hegemon in Asia, presents the case study on China´s hydro-behaviour in the Yarlung-Tsangpo river basin, and outlines a framework for promoting trans-boundary watercooperation.( Source:IDSA)
The Paper examines China´s general performance as a hydro-hegemon in Asia, presents the case study on China´s hydro-behaviour in the Yarlung-Tsangpo river basin, and outlines a framework for promoting trans-boundary watercooperation.( Source:IDSA)
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