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LyrArc brings in selected articles from many of the world's top publications.

Articles are selected by experts and you can see the gist of the important articles.


Economist Original article ›
NYTimes.com Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Widespread flooding along the Yangtse River and in Sichuan province, the city of Chongquing. The Three Gorges dam 280 miles upstream reaches its highest level. About 63 million people affected, 54,000 homes destroyed. many businesses have faced the pandemic in the first half and now floods in the second half. Some analysts in China say China's governance model and administration are facing questions with the number of man made and natural disasters in 2020.

Wall Street Journal Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Dai Quing, environmental activist and human rights activist occupies a unique position in China because of her history and because of what she is. She was raised by a senior Chinese military leader after both her parent died fighting the Japanese. She has criticized the rush to builda huge dam on the Yangtze river, arguing why not many smaller dams. but the country's leader's especially Li Peng a former premier see the Three Gorges dam as a project that signals Chinese modernization and have overlooked all the signs that this may not be the best way to modernize and their may be other better ways considering the danger of mudslides in the silty soil of the Three Gorges area. See the link to the WSJ Dec 31, 2007, on how the Canadian got involved and how the feasibility study was based on the Quebec Hydro's experience in a rocky region of norther Quebec, the huge James Bay dam, that is very different from the Yangste area of the Three Gorges with its silty soil.
Washington Post Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Andrew Higgins tells the story of the China Power Investment Corporation's hydro electricity generation project on Burma's Irrawady river. The project is located in the northern part of Burma, in Myitsone, Kachin state. This was to be the first of seven hydroelectric dams on the Irrawady river. Initial opposition to the project by local people turned into a national opposition movement against the projects as it became clear that the huge project which would generate as much electricity as the Three Gorges dam in China, or seven times the Hoover dam in the U.S., would for the most part benefit China. Burma's economy was too small after decades of neglect to need this much electricity. The fears of ecological damage, uprooting the people living in the area, took on a new dimension as national opposition coalesced around the issue of Burmese sovereignty. The former general, President Thein Sein, who assumed the position in March 2011, had second thoughts. One former military officer, leading one of the opposition groups, expressed fears that Burma would become a colony that helped China meet its energy needs under the arrangement with China Power Investment Corporation. China was already working with regimes in Sudan and Angola to meet its energy needs. In September 2011, President Thein Sein halted work on the project. This happens just as the country's military is relaxing its hold on the media and allowing opposition leaders to express their views. The two developments may be connected as the military sees the need for getting public support to counter China's pressure to go along with the project. Years of external pressure failed to create an opening for democracy in Burma. This event appears to create the atmosphere for a genuine expression of Burmese feeling and desire for protecting its sovereignty, which would help it join the world community, with the military finding a common ground with public sentiment....
New York Times Original article ›

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