logo
Satellite images show surge in rare earth mining in rebel-held Myanmar

Satellite images show surge in rare earth mining in rebel-held Myanmar

Al Jazeera5 days ago
Bangkok, Thailand – A surge in rare earth mining in rebel-held pockets of Myanmar supplying Chinese processing plants is being blamed for toxic levels of heavy metals in Thai waterways, including the Mekong River.
China dominates the global refining of rare earth metals – key inputs in everything from wind turbines to advanced missile systems – but imports much of its raw material from neighbouring Myanmar, where the mines have been blamed for poisoning local communities.
Recent satellite images and water sample testing suggest the mines are spreading, along with the environmental damage they cause.
'Since the mining operation started, there is no protection for the local people,' Sai Hor Hseng, a spokesman at the Shan Human Rights Foundation, a local advocacy group based in eastern Myanmar's Shan state, told Al Jazeera.
'They don't care what happens to the environment,' he said, or those living downstream of the mines in Thailand.
An estimated 1,500 people rallied in northern Thailand's Chiang Rai province in June, urging the Thai government and China to pressure the mining operators in Myanmar to stop polluting their rivers.
Villagers in Chiang Rai first noticed an odd orange-yellow tint to the Kok River – a tributary of the Mekong that enters Thailand from Myanmar – before the start of this year's rainy season in May.
Repeated rounds of testing by Thai authorities since then have found levels of arsenic and lead in the river several times higher than what the World Health Organization (WHO) deems safe.
Thai authorities advised locals living along the Kok to not even touch the water, while tests have also found excess arsenic levels in the Sai River, another tributary of the Mekong that flows from Myanmar into Thailand, as well as in the Mekong's mainstream.
Locals are now worried about the harm that contaminated water could do to their crops, their livestock and themselves.
Arsenic is infamously toxic.
Medical studies have linked long-term human exposure to high levels of the chemical to neurological disorders, organ failure and cancer.
'This needs to be solved right now; it cannot wait until the next generation, for the babies to be deformed or whatever,' Pianporn Deetes, Southeast Asia campaign director at the advocacy group International Rivers, told Al Jazeera.
'People are concerned also about the irrigation, because … [they are] now using the rivers – the water from the Kok River and the Sai River – for their rice paddies, and it's an important crop for the population here,' Pianporn said.
'We learned from other areas already … that this kind of activity should not happen in the upstream of the water source of a million people,' she said.
'A very good correlation'
Thai authorities blame upstream mining in Myanmar for the toxic rivers, but they have been vague about the exact source or sources.
Rights groups and environmental activists say the mine sites are nestled in pockets of Shan state under the control of the United Wa State Army (UWSA), a well-armed, secretive rebel group that runs two semi-autonomous enclaves in the area, one bordering China and the other Thailand.
That makes the sites hard to access. Not even Myanmar's military regime dares to send troops into UWSA-held territory.
While some have blamed the recent river pollution on the UWSA's gold mines, the latest tests in Thailand lay most of the fault on the mining of rare earth minerals.
In a study commissioned by the Thai government, Tanapon Phenrat, an associate professor of civil engineering at Naresuan University, took seven water samples from the Kok and surrounding rivers in early June.
Tanapon told Al Jazeera that the samples collected closest to the border with Myanmar showed the highest levels of heavy metals and confirmed that the source of the contamination lay upstream of Thailand in Shan state.
Significantly, Tanapon said, the water samples contained the same 'fingerprint' of heavy metals, and in roughly the same concentrations, as had earlier water samples from Myanmar's Kachin State, north of Shan, where rare earth mining has been thriving for the past decade.
'We compared that with the concentrations we found in the Kok River, and we found that it has a very good correlation,' Tanapon said.
'Concentrations in the Kok River can be attributed about 60 to 70 percent … [to] rare earth mining,' he added.
The presence of rare earth mines along the Kok River in Myanmar was first exposed by the Shan Human Rights Foundation in May.
Satellite images available on Google Earth showed two new mine sites inside the UWSA's enclave on the Thai border developed over the past one to two years – one on the western slope of the river, another on the east.
The foundation also used satellite images to identify what it said are another 26 rare earth mines inside the UWSA's enclave next to China.
All but three of those mines were built over the past few years, and many are located at the headwaters of the Loei River, yet another tributary of the Mekong.
Researchers who have studied Myanmar's rare earth mining industry say the large, round mineral collection pools visible in the satellite images give the sites away as rare earth mines.
The Shan Human Rights Foundation says villagers living near the new mines in Shan state have also told how workers there are scooping up a pasty white powder from the collection pools, just as they have seen in online videos of the rare earth mines further north in Kachin.
'Zero environmental monitoring'
Patrick Meehan, a lecturer at the University of Manchester in the UK who has studied Myanmar's rare earth mines, said reports emerging from Shan state fit with what he knows of similar operations in Kachin.
'The way companies tend to operate in Myanmar is that there is zero pre-mining environmental assessment, zero environmental monitoring, and there are none of those sorts of regulations or protections in place,' Meehan said.
The leaching process being used involves pumping chemicals into the hillsides to draw the rare earth metals out of the rock. That watery mixture of chemicals and minerals is then pumped out of the ground and into the collection pools, where the rare earths are then separated and gathered up.
Without careful attention to keeping everything contained at a mine, said Meehan, the risks of contaminating local rivers and groundwater could be high.
Rare earth mines are situated close to rivers because of the large volumes of water needed for pumping the extractive chemicals into the hills, he said.
The contaminated water is then often pumped back into the river, he added, while the groundwater polluted by the leaching can end up in the river as well.
'There is definitely scope for that,' said Meehan.
He and others have tracked the effect such mines have already had in Kachin – where hundreds of mining sites now dot the state's border with China – from once-teeming streams now barren of fish to rice stalks yielding fewer grains and livestock falling ill and dying after drinking from local creeks.
In a 2024 report, the environmental group Global Witness called the fallout from Kachin's mining boom 'devastating'.
Ben Hardman, Mekong legal director for the US advocacy group EarthRights International, said locals in Kachin have also told his team about mineworkers dying in unusually high numbers.
The worry now, he adds, is that Shan state and the neighbouring countries into which Myanmar's rivers flow will suffer the same fate as has Kachin, especially if the mine sites continue to multiply as global demand for rare earth minerals grows.
'There's a long history of rare earth mining causing serious environmental harms that are very long-term, and with pretty egregious health implications for communities,' Hardman said.
'That was the case in China in the 2010s, and is the case in Kachin now. And it's the same situation now evolving in Shan state, and so we can expect to see the same harms,' he added.
'You need to stop it at the source'
Most, if not all, of the rare earths mined in Myanmar are sent to China to be refined, processed, and either exported or put to use in a range of green-energy and, increasingly, military hardware.
But, unlike China, neither Myanmar, Laos nor Thailand have the sophisticated processing plants that can transform raw ore into valuable material, according to SFA (Oxford), a critical minerals and metals consulting firm.
The Institute for Strategy and Policy-Myanmar, a local think tank, says Chinese customs data also show that Myanmar has been China's main source of rare earths from abroad since at least 2017, including a record $1.4bn-worth in 2023.
Myanmar's exports of rare earth minerals were growing at the same time as China was placing tough new curbs on mining them at home, after witnessing the environmental damage it was doing to its own communities. Buying the minerals from Myanmar has allowed China to outsource much of the problem.
That is why many are blaming not only the mine operators and the UWSA for the environmental fallout from Myanmar's mines, but China.
The UWSA could not be reached for comment, and neither China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs nor its embassy in Myanmar replied to Al Jazeera's emails seeking a response.
In a June 8 Facebook post, reacting to reports of Chinese-run mines in Myanmar allegedly polluting Thai rivers, the Chinese embassy in Thailand said all Chinese companies operating abroad had to follow local laws and regulations.
The embassy also said China was open to cooperating with Mekong River countries to protect the local environment, but gave no details on what that might entail.
Thailand has said it is working with both China and Myanmar to solve the problem.
In a bid to tackle the problem, though, the Thai government has proposed building dams along the affected rivers in Chiang Rai province to filter their waters for pollutants.
Local politicians and environmentalists question whether such dams would work.
International Rivers' Pianporn Deetes said there was no known precedent of dams working in such a manner in rivers on the scale of the Mekong and its tributaries.
'If it's [a] limited area, a small creek or in a faraway standalone mining area, it could work. It's not going to work with this international river,' she said.
Naresuan University's Tanapon said he was building computer models to study whether a series of cascading weirs – small, dam-like barriers that are built across a river to control water flow – could help.
But he, too, said such efforts would only mitigate the problem at best.
Dams and weirs, Tanapon said, 'can just slow down or reduce the impact'.
'You need to stop it at the source,' he added.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Taiwan reports first case of chikungunya virus from China outbreak
Taiwan reports first case of chikungunya virus from China outbreak

Al Jazeera

time5 days ago

  • Al Jazeera

Taiwan reports first case of chikungunya virus from China outbreak

Taiwan has reported its first confirmed case of chikungunya fever, imported from China, where a historic outbreak of the mosquito-borne virus is under way. Chikungunya has swept through southern China in recent weeks, primarily in the manufacturing hub of Foshan on the Pearl River Delta, with cases rising to more than 8,000, marking the largest outbreak ever recorded in the country, according to Roger Hewson, virus surveillance lead at the United Kingdom's Wellcome Sanger Institute. Taiwan's Centers for Disease Control (CDC) said on Friday that the chikungunya virus was detected in a Taiwanese woman who had travelled to Foshan and returned to Taiwan on July 30. It was the first case of its kind detected so far in 2025, though more than a dozen cases have been previously detected and originated in Indonesia, the Philippines and Sri Lanka. The CDC has raised its travel advisory for China's Guangdong province, the epicentre of the outbreak, to level 2 out of 3, urging travellers to use 'enhanced precautions'. The virus can lead to high fever, rash, headache, nausea and fatigue lasting up to seven days, and muscle and joint pain that can last for several weeks. 'The outbreak in Foshan and surrounding areas of Guangdong province has unfolded rapidly and at a scale unprecedented for China,' Hewson said in a statement. The surge is due to limited immunity in China and 'environmental suitability' for the virus-carrying Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus mosquitoes, which breed in stagnant water, he said. Chinese health authorities have responded with containment strategies ranging from household-level inspections and enforced bed nets, to drone-based fogging and even quarantines, reminiscent of the COVID-19 pandemic, Hewson said. The Associated Press news agency reported that residents of Foshan can be fined as much as up to 10,000 RMB ($1,400) for keeping water in outdoor containers – a popular breeding ground for mosquitoes. The outbreak follows more than a month of typhoons and heavier-than-usual monsoon rains in China. Last week, Hong Kong – located some 180km (289 miles) from Foshan – was hit by its worst August rainstorm since records began in 1884. Chinese state media said despite the historic number of chikungunya cases, the outbreak appears to have finally peaked. Foshan reported 2,892 local infections from July 27 to August 2, but no severe or fatal cases, according to China's state-run Xinhua news agency. 'The recent surge has been initially contained, with a downward trend in newly reported cases across the province,' Kang Min, director of the infectious disease control institute at the Guangdong Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention, told Xinhua.

Satellite images show surge in rare earth mining in rebel-held Myanmar
Satellite images show surge in rare earth mining in rebel-held Myanmar

Al Jazeera

time5 days ago

  • Al Jazeera

Satellite images show surge in rare earth mining in rebel-held Myanmar

Bangkok, Thailand – A surge in rare earth mining in rebel-held pockets of Myanmar supplying Chinese processing plants is being blamed for toxic levels of heavy metals in Thai waterways, including the Mekong River. China dominates the global refining of rare earth metals – key inputs in everything from wind turbines to advanced missile systems – but imports much of its raw material from neighbouring Myanmar, where the mines have been blamed for poisoning local communities. Recent satellite images and water sample testing suggest the mines are spreading, along with the environmental damage they cause. 'Since the mining operation started, there is no protection for the local people,' Sai Hor Hseng, a spokesman at the Shan Human Rights Foundation, a local advocacy group based in eastern Myanmar's Shan state, told Al Jazeera. 'They don't care what happens to the environment,' he said, or those living downstream of the mines in Thailand. An estimated 1,500 people rallied in northern Thailand's Chiang Rai province in June, urging the Thai government and China to pressure the mining operators in Myanmar to stop polluting their rivers. Villagers in Chiang Rai first noticed an odd orange-yellow tint to the Kok River – a tributary of the Mekong that enters Thailand from Myanmar – before the start of this year's rainy season in May. Repeated rounds of testing by Thai authorities since then have found levels of arsenic and lead in the river several times higher than what the World Health Organization (WHO) deems safe. Thai authorities advised locals living along the Kok to not even touch the water, while tests have also found excess arsenic levels in the Sai River, another tributary of the Mekong that flows from Myanmar into Thailand, as well as in the Mekong's mainstream. Locals are now worried about the harm that contaminated water could do to their crops, their livestock and themselves. Arsenic is infamously toxic. Medical studies have linked long-term human exposure to high levels of the chemical to neurological disorders, organ failure and cancer. 'This needs to be solved right now; it cannot wait until the next generation, for the babies to be deformed or whatever,' Pianporn Deetes, Southeast Asia campaign director at the advocacy group International Rivers, told Al Jazeera. 'People are concerned also about the irrigation, because … [they are] now using the rivers – the water from the Kok River and the Sai River – for their rice paddies, and it's an important crop for the population here,' Pianporn said. 'We learned from other areas already … that this kind of activity should not happen in the upstream of the water source of a million people,' she said. 'A very good correlation' Thai authorities blame upstream mining in Myanmar for the toxic rivers, but they have been vague about the exact source or sources. Rights groups and environmental activists say the mine sites are nestled in pockets of Shan state under the control of the United Wa State Army (UWSA), a well-armed, secretive rebel group that runs two semi-autonomous enclaves in the area, one bordering China and the other Thailand. That makes the sites hard to access. Not even Myanmar's military regime dares to send troops into UWSA-held territory. While some have blamed the recent river pollution on the UWSA's gold mines, the latest tests in Thailand lay most of the fault on the mining of rare earth minerals. In a study commissioned by the Thai government, Tanapon Phenrat, an associate professor of civil engineering at Naresuan University, took seven water samples from the Kok and surrounding rivers in early June. Tanapon told Al Jazeera that the samples collected closest to the border with Myanmar showed the highest levels of heavy metals and confirmed that the source of the contamination lay upstream of Thailand in Shan state. Significantly, Tanapon said, the water samples contained the same 'fingerprint' of heavy metals, and in roughly the same concentrations, as had earlier water samples from Myanmar's Kachin State, north of Shan, where rare earth mining has been thriving for the past decade. 'We compared that with the concentrations we found in the Kok River, and we found that it has a very good correlation,' Tanapon said. 'Concentrations in the Kok River can be attributed about 60 to 70 percent … [to] rare earth mining,' he added. The presence of rare earth mines along the Kok River in Myanmar was first exposed by the Shan Human Rights Foundation in May. Satellite images available on Google Earth showed two new mine sites inside the UWSA's enclave on the Thai border developed over the past one to two years – one on the western slope of the river, another on the east. The foundation also used satellite images to identify what it said are another 26 rare earth mines inside the UWSA's enclave next to China. All but three of those mines were built over the past few years, and many are located at the headwaters of the Loei River, yet another tributary of the Mekong. Researchers who have studied Myanmar's rare earth mining industry say the large, round mineral collection pools visible in the satellite images give the sites away as rare earth mines. The Shan Human Rights Foundation says villagers living near the new mines in Shan state have also told how workers there are scooping up a pasty white powder from the collection pools, just as they have seen in online videos of the rare earth mines further north in Kachin. 'Zero environmental monitoring' Patrick Meehan, a lecturer at the University of Manchester in the UK who has studied Myanmar's rare earth mines, said reports emerging from Shan state fit with what he knows of similar operations in Kachin. 'The way companies tend to operate in Myanmar is that there is zero pre-mining environmental assessment, zero environmental monitoring, and there are none of those sorts of regulations or protections in place,' Meehan said. The leaching process being used involves pumping chemicals into the hillsides to draw the rare earth metals out of the rock. That watery mixture of chemicals and minerals is then pumped out of the ground and into the collection pools, where the rare earths are then separated and gathered up. Without careful attention to keeping everything contained at a mine, said Meehan, the risks of contaminating local rivers and groundwater could be high. Rare earth mines are situated close to rivers because of the large volumes of water needed for pumping the extractive chemicals into the hills, he said. The contaminated water is then often pumped back into the river, he added, while the groundwater polluted by the leaching can end up in the river as well. 'There is definitely scope for that,' said Meehan. He and others have tracked the effect such mines have already had in Kachin – where hundreds of mining sites now dot the state's border with China – from once-teeming streams now barren of fish to rice stalks yielding fewer grains and livestock falling ill and dying after drinking from local creeks. In a 2024 report, the environmental group Global Witness called the fallout from Kachin's mining boom 'devastating'. Ben Hardman, Mekong legal director for the US advocacy group EarthRights International, said locals in Kachin have also told his team about mineworkers dying in unusually high numbers. The worry now, he adds, is that Shan state and the neighbouring countries into which Myanmar's rivers flow will suffer the same fate as has Kachin, especially if the mine sites continue to multiply as global demand for rare earth minerals grows. 'There's a long history of rare earth mining causing serious environmental harms that are very long-term, and with pretty egregious health implications for communities,' Hardman said. 'That was the case in China in the 2010s, and is the case in Kachin now. And it's the same situation now evolving in Shan state, and so we can expect to see the same harms,' he added. 'You need to stop it at the source' Most, if not all, of the rare earths mined in Myanmar are sent to China to be refined, processed, and either exported or put to use in a range of green-energy and, increasingly, military hardware. But, unlike China, neither Myanmar, Laos nor Thailand have the sophisticated processing plants that can transform raw ore into valuable material, according to SFA (Oxford), a critical minerals and metals consulting firm. The Institute for Strategy and Policy-Myanmar, a local think tank, says Chinese customs data also show that Myanmar has been China's main source of rare earths from abroad since at least 2017, including a record $1.4bn-worth in 2023. Myanmar's exports of rare earth minerals were growing at the same time as China was placing tough new curbs on mining them at home, after witnessing the environmental damage it was doing to its own communities. Buying the minerals from Myanmar has allowed China to outsource much of the problem. That is why many are blaming not only the mine operators and the UWSA for the environmental fallout from Myanmar's mines, but China. The UWSA could not be reached for comment, and neither China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs nor its embassy in Myanmar replied to Al Jazeera's emails seeking a response. In a June 8 Facebook post, reacting to reports of Chinese-run mines in Myanmar allegedly polluting Thai rivers, the Chinese embassy in Thailand said all Chinese companies operating abroad had to follow local laws and regulations. The embassy also said China was open to cooperating with Mekong River countries to protect the local environment, but gave no details on what that might entail. Thailand has said it is working with both China and Myanmar to solve the problem. In a bid to tackle the problem, though, the Thai government has proposed building dams along the affected rivers in Chiang Rai province to filter their waters for pollutants. Local politicians and environmentalists question whether such dams would work. International Rivers' Pianporn Deetes said there was no known precedent of dams working in such a manner in rivers on the scale of the Mekong and its tributaries. 'If it's [a] limited area, a small creek or in a faraway standalone mining area, it could work. It's not going to work with this international river,' she said. Naresuan University's Tanapon said he was building computer models to study whether a series of cascading weirs – small, dam-like barriers that are built across a river to control water flow – could help. But he, too, said such efforts would only mitigate the problem at best. Dams and weirs, Tanapon said, 'can just slow down or reduce the impact'. 'You need to stop it at the source,' he added.

Myanmar's lawless mining blamed for dangerous pollution in Mekong River
Myanmar's lawless mining blamed for dangerous pollution in Mekong River

Al Jazeera

time02-08-2025

  • Al Jazeera

Myanmar's lawless mining blamed for dangerous pollution in Mekong River

Houayxay, Laos – Fishing went well today for Khon, a Laotian fisherman, who lives in a floating house built from plastic drums, scrap metal and wood on the Mekong River. 'I caught two catfish,' the 52-year-old tells Al Jazeera proudly, lifting his catch for inspection. Khon's simple houseboat contains all he needs to live on this mighty river: A few metal pots, a fire to cook food on and to keep warm by at night, as well as some nets and a few clothes. What Khon does not always have is fish. 'There are days when I catch nothing. It's frustrating,' he said. 'The water levels change all the time because of the dams. And now they say the river is polluted, too. Up there in Myanmar, they dig in the mountains. Mines, or something like that. And all that toxic stuff ends up here,' he adds. Khon lives in Laos's northwestern Bokeo province on one of the most scenic stretches of the Mekong River as it meanders through the heart of the Golden Triangle – the borderland shared by Laos, Thailand and Myanmar. This remote region has long been infamous for drug production and trafficking. Now it is caught up in the global scramble for gold and rare earth minerals, crucial for the production of new technologies and used in everything from smartphones to electric cars. Over the past year, rivers in this region, such as the Ruak, Sai and Kok – all tributaries of the Mekong – have shown abnormal levels of arsenic, lead, nickel and manganese, according to Thailand's Pollution Control Department. Arsenic, in particular, has exceeded World Health Organization safety limits, prompting health warnings for riverside communities. These tributaries feed directly into the Mekong and contamination has spread to parts of the river's mainstream. The effects have been observed in Laos, prompting the Mekong River Commission to declare the situation 'moderately serious'. 'Recent official water quality testing clearly indicates that the Mekong River on the Thai-Lao border is contaminated with arsenic,' Pianporn Deetes, Southeast Asia campaigns director for the advocacy group International Rivers, told Al Jazeera. 'This is alarming and just the first chapter of the crisis, if the mining continues,' Pianporn said. 'Fishermen have recently caught diseased, young catfish. This is a matter of regional public health, and it needs urgent action from governments,' she added. The source of the heavy metals contamination is believed to be upriver in Myanmar's Shan State, where dozens of unregulated mines have sprung up as the search for rare earth minerals intensifies globally. Zachary Abuza, a professor at the National War College in Washington and an expert on Southeast Asia, said at least a dozen, and possibly as many as 20, mines focused on gold and rare earth extraction have been established in southern Shan State over the past year alone. Myanmar is now four years into a civil war and lawlessness reigns in the border area, which is held by two powerful ethnic armed groups: the Restoration Council of Shan State (RCSS) and the United Wa State Army (UWSA). Myanmar's military government has 'no real control', Abuza said, apart from holding Tachileik town, the region's main border crossing between Thailand and Myanmar. Neither the RCSS nor the UWSA are 'fighting the junta', he said, explaining how both are busy enriching themselves from the chaos in the region and the rush to open mines. 'In this vacuum, mining has exploded – likely with Chinese traders involved. The military in Naypyidaw can't issue permits or enforce environmental rules, but they still take their share of the profits,' Abuza said. 'Alarming decline' Pollution from mining is not the Mekong River's only ailment. For years, the health of the river has been degraded by a growing chain of hydropower dams that have drastically altered its natural rhythm and ecology. In the Mekong's upper reaches, inside China, almost a dozen huge hydropower dams have been built, including the Xiaowan and Nuozhadu dams, which are said to be capable of holding back a huge amount of the river's flow. Further downstream, Laos has staked its economic future on hydropower. According to the Mekong Dam Monitor, which is hosted by the Stimson Centre think tank in Washington, DC, at least 75 dams are now operational on the Mekong's tributaries, and two in Laos – Xayaburi and Don Sahong – are directly on the mainstream river. As a rule, hydropower is a cleaner alternative to coal. But the rush to dam the Mekong is driving another type of environmental crisis. According to WWF and the Mekong River Commission, the Mekong River basin once supported about 60 million people and provided up to 25 percent of the world's freshwater fish catch. Today, one in five fish species in the Mekong is at risk of extinction, and the river's sediment and nutrient flows have been severely reduced, as documented in a 2023–2024 Mekong Dam Monitor report and research by International Rivers. 'The alarming decline in fish populations in the Mekong is an urgent wake-up call for action to save these extraordinary – and extraordinarily important – species, which underpin not only the region's societies and economies but also the health of the Mekong's freshwater ecosystems,' the WWF's Asia Pacific Regional Director Lan Mercado said at the launch of a 2024 report titled The Mekong's Forgotten Fishes. In Houayxay, the capital of Bokeo province, the markets appeared mostly absent of fish during a recent visit. At Kad Wang View, the town's main market, the fish stalls were nearly deserted. 'Maybe this afternoon, or maybe tomorrow,' said Mali, a vendor in her 60s. In front of her, Mali had arranged her small stock of fish in a circle, perhaps hoping to make the display look fuller for potential customers. At another market, Sydonemy, just outside Houayxay town, the story was the same. The fish stalls were bare. 'Sometimes the fish come, sometimes they don't. We just wait,' another vendor said. 'There used to be giant fish here,' recalled Vilasai, 53, who comes from a fishing family but now works as a taxi driver. 'Now the river gives us little. Even the water for irrigation – people are scared to use it. No one knows if it's still clean,' he told Al Jazeera, referring to the pollution from Myanmar's mines. 'The river used to be predictable' Ian G Baird, professor of geography and Southeast Asian studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, said upstream dams – especially those in China – have had serious downstream effects in northern Thailand and Laos. 'The ecosystem and the lives that depend on the river evolved to adapt to specific hydrological conditions,' Baird told Al Jazeera. 'But since the dams were built, those conditions have changed dramatically. There are now rapid water level fluctuations in the dry season, which used to be rare, and this has negative impacts on both the river and the people,' he said. Another major effect is the reversal of the river's natural cycle. 'Now there is more water in the dry season and less during the rainy season. That reduces flooding and the beneficial ecological effects of the annual flood pulse,' Baird explained. 'The dams hold water during the rainy season and release it in the dry season to maximise energy output and profits. But that also kills seasonally flooded forests and disrupts the river's ecological function,' he said. Bun Chan, 45, lives with his wife Nanna Kuhd, 40, on a floating house near Houayxay. He fishes while his wife sells whatever he catches at the local market. On a recent morning, he cast his net again and again – but for nothing. 'Looks like I won't catch anything today,' Bun Chan told Al Jazeera as he pulled up his empty net. 'The other day I caught a few, but we didn't sell them. We're keeping them in cages in the water, so at least we have something to eat if I don't catch more,' he said. Hom Phan has been a fisherman on the Mekong his entire life. He steers his wooden boat across the river, following a route he knows by instinct. In some parts of the river, the current is strong enough now to drag everything under, the 67-year-old says. All around him, the silence is broken only by the chug of his small outboard engine and the calls of distant birds. 'The river used to be predictable. Now we don't know when it will rise or fall,' Hom Phan said. 'Fish can't find their spawning grounds. They're disappearing. And we might too, if nothing changes,' he told Al Jazeera. Evening approaches in Houayxay, and Khon, the fisherman, rolls up his nets and prepares dinner in his floating home. As he waits for the fire to catch to cook a meal, he quietly contemplates the great river he lives on. Despite the dams in China, the pollution from mines in neighbouring Myanmar, and the increasing difficulty in landing the catch he relies on to survive, Khon was outwardly serene as he considered his next day of fishing. With his eyes fixed on the waters that flowed deeply beneath his home, he said with a smile: 'We try again tomorrow.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store