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2 HISTORY OF MEKONG COOPERATION IRBP Course PP 2.4.

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Presentation on theme: "2 HISTORY OF MEKONG COOPERATION IRBP Course PP 2.4."— Presentation transcript:

1 2 HISTORY OF MEKONG COOPERATION IRBP Course PP 2.4

2 3 Int’l River Basin Organizations There are now over 260 international river basins. Together they cover 45 percent of the earth’s land surface Carry 80 percent of its fresh water. They include parts of 145 nations, 21 of which lie entirely within a shared basin.

3 4 ROLES OF RIVER BASIN ORGANIZATIONS Provision of common arena for member states to regularly meet and discuss issues related to their shared water resources. Promoting information sharing among various countries and agencies Developing a co-ordinated water resource development and management scheme

4 5 ROLES OF RBOs CONT. Securing assistance from donor countries and development aid agencies Resolution of conflicts among member states Sharing of costs and benefits in water resources development/management

5 6 1957 Mekong Committee 1978 Interim Mekong Committee 1995 Mekong River Commission Birth of Mekong Cooperation

6 7 Mekong Committee 1957 Committee for Coordination and Investigation of Mekong River Goal: "formulation, investigation, coordination, supervision and control of water resources development plans for the LMB"

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11 12 Interim Mekong Committee 1977 1975 - Joint Declaration of Principles for Utilization of the Waters of the LMB – Legal framework for cooperation 1975: Cambodia withdrew from Mekong Committee 1977 - Thailand, Lao PDR and Viet Nam formed Interim Mekong Committee

12 13 Mekong River Commission 1991 Cambodia asked to rejoin 1992 – 1994 - search for new agreement framework – Rise of ASEAN as regional framework – Increased economic development of region – China launched construction of Manwan Dam April 1995 - signing of Mekong Agreement established Mekong River Commission – international organization (4 countries) – reports to Council of Ministers – Joint Committee and National Mekong Committees

13 14 MRC Organisational Structure JOINT COMMITTEE (Members at level of Head of Department or higher) COUNCIL (Members at Ministerial and Cabinet Level) National Mekong Committee Secretariats NATIONAL MEKONG COMMITTEES (NMC) (Member Agencies) DONOR CONSUL- TATIVE GROUP (Donor countries and cooperating institutions) Government of Cambodia Government of Laos Government of Thailand Government of Vietnam Mekong River Com- mission Secretariat

14 15 Characteristics of 95 Agreement An intergovernmental agreement 06 chapters and 42 articles. Ground was laid for a more responsible and sustainable management and development: Codification of existing Inter.l water law principles and emerging principles; Provide for a joint permanent mechanism (policy & tech.)for Mekong river basin management; Mechanism for dispute settlement;

15 16 Goals of the Mekong Agreement Equitable sharing of Mekong water Maintaining ecological balance Social and economic well-being Cooperation and interdependent growth Balanced development, based on understanding of the resource

16 17 1995 Agreement and sustainable development Four countries agreed to: “Cooperate.. in the sustainable development, utilisation, management and conservation of the Mekong River Basin water and related resources” Framework agreement which sets out principles, not details

17 18 AGREEMENT ON THE COOPERATION FOR THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF THE MEKONG RIVER BASIN Chapter I. Preamble Chapter II. Definition of Terms Chapter III. Objectives & Principles of Cooperation Chapter IV. Institutional Framework Chapter V. Addressing Differences and Disputes Chapter VI. Final Provisions [42 Articles in the 6 Chapters] Protocol To the Agreement For the Establishment of the Mekong River Commission Signed by the Governments of Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Viet Nam on April 5, 1995 at Chiang Rai, Thailand 1995 Mekong Agreement Chapter Outline

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19 20 ChallengesChallenges Before 1995 joint investigations After 1995 joint planning coordinated implementation environment protection prevention and cessation of harmful effects adoption of rules for reasonable and equitable use of the river system and for the maintenance of flows on the mainstream freedom of navigation increased cooperation with upstream countries

20 21 International River Basin - basic

21 22 Mainstream Sea Tributary (T1) (T2) (T3) (T1) (T2) (T3) (T1) Basin Boundary Distributaries (T1) International River Basin: Riparian Nations (RN) - Boundaries RN1 RN2 RN3 RN4

22 23 Mainstream Sea Tributary (T1) (T2) (T3) (T1) (T2) (T3) (T1) Basin Boundary Distributaries (T1) International River Basin: One-Nation-Basin Scenario

23 24 International Customary Water Law Principles and Practices Considerations by 4 LMB riparian parties: Sovereign equality and territorial integrity Freedom of navigation Reasonable and equitable utilization Duty not to cause harm Duty to inform of developments and exchange of data and information

24 25 Important Dates & Events in the History of Cooperation in Lower Mekong River Basin 9/1957: Statute of the Committee For Co- Ordination Of Investigations Of The LMB 1970: Indicative Basin Plan 1/1975: Joint Declaration of Principles for the Utilization of Waters of LMB 1978: Declaration of the IMC 1987: Revised Indicative Basin Plan 12/1992: Kuala Lumpur Joint Communiqué 1993-1994: Negotiations for a New Mekong Agreement 4/1995: Mekong Agreement On The Cooperation For The Sustainable Development Of the Mekong River Basin

25 26 Draw up Water Resource Management Structure in your country. Analyze Strengths and Weakness of your existing structure and make recommendations for improvement/change


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