The world's high dams including the ones in the Himalayan region cannot resist extreme weather patterns. The
fragility of the entire Himalayan watershed creates a compelling logic
for a cumulative impact assessment of all infrastructure projects in the
Indian and Chinese Himalayan region.
China and India are river civilisations. Both are the largest hydropower producers in Asia and have
become world leaders in dam construction, responsible for most new dams built since the 1990s. Neither China has drawn lessons from the collapse of the Shimantan and Banqiao dams on August 7, 1975, the
world's biggest dam disaster nor India is likely to learn from the
collapse of Chungthang dam at the midnight of October 4, 2023 in Sikkim.
Unmindful of the Sikkim dam collapse, R.K. Singh, Union Minister for Power and Renewable Energy has said that the glacier lake outburst (GLOF) that triggered a flood in Sikkim and destroyed the Chungthang dam will not slow India’s reliance on hydropower.
The Chungthang dam, a key component of the 1,200 MW Sikkim Urja hydel
power project, was destroyed along with several highways, villages, and
towns in Sikkim. The quantity of water that gushed out following the
lake outburst overwhelmed the dam’s spillways in 10 minutes. It rendered
any attempt at opening its gates futile. The dam was not engineered to
withstand flow from GLOF events. The collapse of the dam holds lessons
for some 100 large Indian hydropower plants which account for around 12%
in India's energy mix.
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