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- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!sgiblab!sgigate!sgi!cdp!tgray
- From: Tom Gray <tgray@igc.apc.org>
- Newsgroups: sci.environment
- Date: 11 Nov 92 10:26 PST
- Subject: IPS Danube Dam Dispute
- Sender: Notesfile to Usenet Gateway <notes@igc.apc.org>
- Message-ID: <1466601899@igc.apc.org>
- Nf-ID: #N:cdp:1466601899:000:6729
- Nf-From: cdp.UUCP!tgray Nov 11 10:26:00 1992
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- /* Written 12:07 am Oct 29, 1992 by newsdesk@igc.apc.org in igc:ips.englibrary */
- Copyright Inter Press Service 1992, all rights reserved. Permission to re-
- print within 7 days of original date only with permission from 'newsdesk'.
-
- Title: CZECHOSLOVAKIA/HUNGARY: Danube dam dispute worsens
-
-
- an inter press service feature
-
- by chris stephen and vivianne schnitzer
-
- budapest, oct 26 (ips) -- the rift has widened between hungary and
- czechoslovakia over the fate of a hydro-electric dam on the danube
- river, with the decision by the slovak authorities to go ahead
- with the project in the face of protests from budapest and
- environmentalists.
-
- relations between the two countries have been growing
- increasingly tense since 1989, when hungary pulled out of what was
- originally a joint project set up in 1977.
-
- czechoslovakia brought relations between the states to a new low
- at the weekend, announcing that it intended to complete the multi-
- billion dollar gabcikovo project and subsequently blocking the
- danube just north of the hungarian border.
-
- hungary, which considers any diversion a violation of
- internationally recognised national borders, has since launched
- fresh diplomatic efforts to try and halt the work. but the
- atmosphere has been tense since talks sponsored by the european
- community to find a compromise solution collapsed last week.
-
- hours after the talks ended without agreement last friday,
- czechoslovakia declared the project open. several massive steel
- barges were swung across the river close to the hungarian border
- and a fleet of trucks began dumping boulders into the river to
- form a permanent blockade.
-
- the czechoslovak plan is to divert much of the river from its
- present course along the hungary-czechoslovak border into a new
- concrete channel to the north.
-
- klaus binder, the director of the plant, says that this
- deflection of the danube ''is reversible'', and that water
- diverted to the canal can be returned to the river through a
- system of floodgates and sluices. but hungary considers the action
- a violation of the trianon treaty, which established the
- countries' borders in 1919.
-
- environmentalists on both sides say valuable marshland will dry
- up, that subterranean water reserves -- europe's largest -- will
- be upset by changes to the natural balance of the area, and that
- hungarian minorities in the south of slovakia will be exposed to
- flooding.
-
- but czechoslovak engineers contend that water will continue to
- flow down the existing river and that the plant will actually help
- the environment. it will be cleaner than using coal or nuclear
- power, they say.(more/ips)
-
- czechoslovakia/hungary: danube dam dispute worsens(2)
-
- czechoslovakia/hungary: danube (2)
-
- currently, more than two-thirds of the country's electric power
- is produced in thermal power plants fired by low-quality brown
- coal -- a key cause of acid rain which is devastating the
- country's forests.
-
- soviet-designed nuclear power plants provide another 16 percent
- of czechoslovakia's energy, and hydro power accounts for the
- balance, although most available sources of hydro-power have
- already been tapped.
-
- while conclusive proof has yet to be produced that the gabcikovo
- project will cause the damage the hungarians and environmentalists
- claim, the dispute is worsening.
-
- hungary's parliament has voted against allowing the government to
- negotiate a compromise. hungarian appeals have been made to the
- united nations, the ec and the international court in the hague,
- but they all have said that they can only arbitrate if the two
- agree to accept the judgment, something the czechoslovaks refuse.
-
- not surprisingly, political rhetoric is warming up. whilst ruling
- out military action, hungary's foreign ministry spokesman has said
- new measures would be considered. ''these are not going to be
- revealed at this time,'' he said, though trade and financial
- sanctions are suspected.
-
- nationalist leader and slovakian prime minister, vladimir meciar,
- has also ruled out military conflict, but admitted ominously that
- it could come to a ''show of force.''
-
- the situation is complicated by a variety of factors. the first
- of these is that the entire project is on slovak soil and has been
- under czechoslovak control from the outset.
-
- the second is that although officially the dispute is between the
- hungarian and czechoslovak governments, czechoslovakia is set to
- separate into separate republics in 1993 and czech political
- leader vaclav klaus has already said the issue is ''purely
- slovakian.''
-
- prague holds ''no responsibility'' for the continuation of the
- project, he said. ''the end responsibility for the project will be
- with vladimir meciar's government, who will have to answer to the
- international forces after january.''
-
- german minister of foreign affairs klaus kinkel, has added his
- voice to the issue by condemning czechoslovakia's unilateral
- decision to start work on gabcikovo. he reminded the government in
- prague that it was ''responsible for the security of central
- europe.''
-
- the quarrel is likely to cast a shadow over the meeting of the
- two nations at a meeting with the ec presidency in london on
- wednesday. (more/ips)
-
- czechoslovakia/hungary: danube dam dispute worsens(3-e)
-
- czechoslovakia/hungary: danube (3)
-
- despite the statement by plant director binder that five of its
- eight turbines are operative and that electricity production could
- start within a week, it is uncertain how much power can be
- produced.
-
- hungary's pull-out in 1989 severely handicapped the scheme, with
- one of the two dams being abandoned. some estimates say generating
- capacity will be less than seven percent of the needs of slovakia,
- when it splits from czechoslovakia next year.
-
- many millions of dollars are still needed to scoop out the rest
- of a 40 square-kilometre lake behind the dam and one of the main
- hopes of environmentalists is that western financiers will refuse
- to back the project on the grounds that its electricity output
- will be too small.
-
- christian richter, an austrian official from the conservation
- group global 2000, said: ''the point is, it is a huge dam and a
- huge place, but this dam will bring very little hydro-electricity.
- i think the reason they want to finish it is political: they have
- begun it and they don't want to lose face by stopping it.''
- (end/ips/rp-en/vs/ego/trd/mv/cs/dal/92)
-
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