Update for July 15-21:
Notable changes on the Mekong in the last week.
Visit the Monitor home for more, including Burmese, 中文, Khmer, ພາສາລາວ, ไทย, and Tiếng Việt translation.
SPOTLIGHT
Upstream river levels are low, but downstream river levels are high
This week the Mekong’s upstream looks entirely different from its
downstream. At Chiang Saen, Thailand, river levels are much lower than
average due to major restrictions from dams in China like Xiaowan (see
image of the week below). We estimate river levels at Chiang Saen would
be slightly above the average line without dam restrictions. However,
far downstream at Stung Treng, Cambodia, river levels are far above
normal due to recent precipitation outpacing the negative effects of
dams. A tropical storm currently hitting Vietnam’s border with Laos will
likely drive the Stung Treng gauge even higher over the next week,
promoting a strong flood pulse that will help drive the expansion of the
Tonle Sap Lake and the productivity of its fisheries.
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PHOTO OF THE WEEK
Significant restrictions at China’s Xiaowan Dam
Over the last month, the Xiaowan Dam in China (the 2nd largest in the
Mekong) has restricted an estimated 1.31 billion cubic meters of water,
driving the river along the Thai-Lao border to lower than normal levels.
These large restrictions pull down the mighty Mekong flood pulse and
deliver significant impacts to the river’s ecology upon which tens of
millions of people rely on for their livelihoods.
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Where is the water?
We tracked a large cumulative restriction of flow (1.77 billion cubic
meters) at 19 dams across the basin last week. The most significant
restrictions came from Xiaowan (PRC, 713 million cubic meters), Nam Ngum
1 (LAO, 324 million cubic meters), Nam Ngiep 1 (LAO, 107 million cubic
meters), Theun Hinboun Expansion (LAO, 202 million cubic meters), Ubol
Ratana (THA, 183 million cubic meters), and Sirindhorn (THA, 121 million
cubic meters). These restrictions are common at this time of the wet
season but have a negative effect on the Mekong’s fisheries and
agricultural outputs which rely on high river levels throughout the wet
season.
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Most Impactful Dams
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River Levels
Above Savannakhet river levels are trending below normal levels. Below Savannakhet, river levels are now above normal.
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Chiang Saen Gauge
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Stung Treng Gauge
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Weather & Wetness
Drought conditions mostly improved throughout the basin last week. Most
of southern Laos is currently experiencing above average wetness (blue),
which will likely continue into next week due to a recent tropical
storm. Pockets of extreme drought (red) are still persistent in northern
Laos and parts of Cambodia, despite recent storms there.
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