Protesters
want to shut down the Shwe gas pipeline, the potential source of vast revenues
Having successfully persuaded the Myanmar
government to stop construction of the Myitsone Dam on the Irrawaddy River and
close down a planned coal-fired energy plant at Dawei on the southern coast,
protesters have set their sights on the controversial Shwe pipeline, designed
to stretch all the way across Burma to Yunnan in China.
The protests present a dilemma for the
government, which must now learn to balance the antipathy of its citizens to
exploitation of its natural resources against the vast amount of revenues that
would be lost if the Shwe project were to follow the other two into oblivion.
Under decades of military rule, protests against construction projects have
been met with heavy-handed force. Now, if the government wants to speed up the
democratization process, it must contend with what has become known as NIMBY –
“not in my backyard” – in the west.
More than 125 organizations in 20 countries
held demonstrations on March 1 and submitted a letter calling on President
Thein Sein to postpone the trans-Burma oil and gas pipelines project,
expressing serious concerns over human rights abuses as well as the social,
economic and environmental impact on the Burmese people. Nearly 300 people
participated in a demonstration in Yangon, wearing T-shirts with slogans like
“Our Gas, Our Future.” At least nine activists were detained and interrogated
by police for a brief period, but were freed. Another demonstration took place
in the northern city of Chiang Mai in front of the Chinese consulate.
In their letter the protesting groups called
attention to what they called “serious social, economic and environmental
impacts of this project, including human rights abuses.”
“Thousands of acres of farm lands have been
confiscated in Arakan and Shan States and Magwe and Mandalay divisions to clear
the way for the pipeline corridor and related infrastructure,” the letter said,
with the livelihoods of local fishing families in Arakan State destroyed due to
development of offshore infrastructure for the pipeline project. The letter
also called attention to militarization along the pipeline as protest from
local residents has required suppression by the military.
If the government buckled under to the demands
of its citizens to close down the dam and the coal-fired plant, the Schwe
pipeline complex is something else entirely. Shutting it down in the face of
public opposition would cost billions. The income to the government from the
pipeline would dwarf what it expected to receive from the Myitsone Dam project.
Cancellation would probably also put the newly
responsive government headed by Thein Sein on a direct confrontation path with
hardliners in the government, said to be led by Vice President Tin Aung Myint
Oo and Htay Oo, general secretary of the Union Solidarity and Development
Party, who have been described as intent on derailing the reform process
despite the cautious approval of governments across the world for the year-old
government. Originally installed in what was universally viewed as a rigged
election, the government has dramatically expanded freedoms, freed democracy
icon Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest and allowed her to stand in an upcoming
by-election.
The US$2.5 billion pipeline, being built by
the Korean construction firm Daewoo International, is actually a spiderweb of
lines designed to deliver 12 million metric tons of oil and 12 billion cubic
meters of natural gas from Burma’s offshore Shwe field annually 771 kilometers
across Myanmar to Kunming in China. The natural gas pipeline will extend
another 2,100 km into China. It is being built under the auspices of the China
National Petroleum Corp. and and Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise. CNPC will hold
a 50.9 percent of the project and manage it, MOGE owning the other 49.1
percent.
Major controversy has developed over the
project, not least because of its environmental implications but also because
it is regarded by a major segment of the country’s citizenry to be delivering
Myanmar’s precious natural resources to China. The Myitsone Dam, with
generating capacity of 7,600 megawatts, was expected to deliver 80 percent of
its power to China despite the fact that70 percent of Myanmar itself is without
electricity.
“China has colonized Burma without shooting a
gun and has sucked the life of the people of Burma with the help of the Burmese
regime and its cronies,” exiled democracy advocate U Aung Din told reporters
recently as quoted in an earlier Asia Sentinel story. “Now, they are killing
the Irrawaddy River as well.”
With a population similar in size to
Thailand’s but with less than 8 percent of its neighbor’s electricity
generating capacity, Myanmar has only about 2,000 megawatts (MW) of generating
capacity against Thailand’s 26,000 MW. Rural, poverty-stricken Laos, with a
population of only 6 million, has generating capacity equal to Burma’s. The
coal-fired plant at Dawei in southern Myanmar would have delivered another
4,000 MW.
An anti-pipeline group called the Shwe Gas
Movement estimates that as many as 15,000 residents of 20 townships will be
forced to move to make way for the construction. Rebels of the minority Shan
state, through which the pipeline runs, have sought to stop it, with troops
attempting to drive out the revels. Heavy fighting erupted last March over the
construction. “Resentment of these pipelines is growing day by day. Thein Sein
should listen to the will of the people,” Shwe Gas Movement's Wong Aung told
reporters at the Chiang Mai rally. “Under the current unaccountable structure,
gas monies from the project will only feed corruption and not benefit the
people.”
If the decision to kill the Myitsone project
surprised and irritated the Chinese government, stopping the Shwe pipeline
would probably infuriate them. The pipeline is projected not only as a major
source of income for the government, but a major source of energy for the
energy-starved Chinese, whose needs are growing at about a 9 percent annual
clip.
The oil portion of the pipeline would deliver
crude that now must travel on supertankers from Africa and the Middle East
through the Malacca Strait. The pipeline would provide a much faster method of
delivery. There are strategic considerations as well, with the Strait of
Malacca heavily patrolled by US Navy ships. If there were a confrontation
between the US and China, that would complicate matters considerably.
Asia Sentinel
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