Upper Intermediate Student's Book: Sustainable Development?
Upper Intermediate Student's Book: Sustainable Development?
Life
5c Page 63 READING TEXT
Sustainable development?
Kai Kensavaong will never again walk along the muddy lanes of Sop On, the
village in southern Laos where she was born. Her old home now lies at the bottom
of a reservoir of brown water created to feed a hydroelectric power plant, the first to
be funded by the World Bank for over twenty years. ‘I’ll never forget that place,’
says the 41-year-old villager. ‘It was my home. I picked my first bamboo stalks
there.’
The bank says that lessons have been learnt from the projects of the sixties and
seventies when people were forced to resettle and whole areas of forest or
agricultural land were flooded. When it comes to clean sources of energy, the bank
thinks hydropower is the pick of the bunch, offering the best solution in a world
where 1.5 billion people have no access to electricity.
In 2010 the dam brought $5.6 million in sales of electricity and it is estimated that
during the next 25 years Nam Theun 2 will generate around $2 billion in revenue to
Laos, one of Asia’s poorest countries, since most of the electricity will be exported
to its power-hungry neighbour, Thailand. The government has promised that this
money will be spent on reducing poverty and both renewing and improving the
country’s infrastructure.
Seventeen villages in the flooded area have now been rebuilt and the 6,200 people –
mostly farmers – who lived in them have been retrained to make a living from the
reservoir.
The power company has promised to double their living standards within five
years. According to the World Bank, 87 per cent of those resettled believe life is
much better than before as they now have electricity, sanitation, clean water, new
roads and greater access to schools and health care.
‘In the old village things just weren’t convenient,’ said Tiea, 25, one of the
relocated villagers. ‘It wasn’t a pretty place, the houses weren’t very nice and we
didn’t have power. In the new village we have electricity, we can see better.’
But the old criticisms have not gone away. Environmental and human rights groups
warn that the dam will have a negative impact on water quality and fish and that the
local people who were relocated after the area was flooded may not be able to
support themselves economically in future.
‘People are happy with these new amenities, but the real problem is how to restore
sustainable livelihoods for communities who used to rely on the natural resources –
forests, fish and grazing lands for their animals – now that they’ve lost these,’ says
Ikuko Matsumoto, programme director for the environmental group, International
Rivers.
As well as the 6,200 villagers already rehoused, activists also point out that there
are over 110,000 people in riverside villages downstream from the dam whose lives
will have to change because of the new river ecosystem. They claim that these
people will have to deal with issues like flooding, decline of the fish population and
poor water quality. How quickly they will pick up new skills is uncertain.
Analysis
The world bank stopped financing hydroelectric dam projects in developing
countries 20 years ago, due to the strong criticism it received, such as the damage it
did to the communities that had their economic development in rural places and the
damage suffered by the environment. But But Nam Theun 2, is a dam that currently
generates electricity, economy and wants to become the battery of Southeast Asia
in Laos. It is also the masterpiece of the bank's new policy of supporting sustainable
hydroelectric projects.
The bank says it has learned from projects that have gone awry over the years when
people were forced to resettle and entire areas of forest or farmland were flooded.
The bank believes that hydroelectric energies are the best option to improve
people's quality of life.
However, the old criticisms have not gone away, environmental and human rights
groups think that the dam will have a negative impact on the quality of the water
and fish and that it is possible that the local population that was relocated after the
area was flooded. cannot support himself financially in the future. Still, people are
happy with the change and the world bank says it responds to the problems that
arise. However, it should not be taken into account that this process of rebuilding
the lives of the villagers is a long and tedious process.
Activity 2
Explanation:
Explanation Explanation:
Human beings are also important
Almost everything that we like the sun and water, we have We have to take care of our
buy, develop and exchange is minds that can create the planet, since we have many
obtained from nature, we use strangest and most creative natural ecosystems that must
natural resources and things.
improve them for our benefit. be in balance for us to live.
example:
example: The climate system
example
The human being likes to have It ensures that the temperature
Production of soccer balls everything in order such as is correct and the atmosphere
having equal opportunities, emits the appropriate amount
education, food and medicine of solar energy.
security.