
China started building a mega-dam on Saturday (July 19, 2025) on a river running through Tibet and India, with Premier Li Qiang attending the commencement ceremony, state media said.
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China started building a mega-dam on Saturday (July 19, 2025) on a river running through Tibet and India, with Premier Li Qiang attending the commencement ceremony, state media said.
Beijing approved the project in December on the river â known as Yarlung Tsangpo in Tibet and Brahmaputra in India â linking it to the countryâs carbon neutrality targets and economic goals in the Tibet region.

âThe electricity generated will be primarily transmitted to other regions for consumption, while also meeting local power needs in Tibet,â state news agency Xinhua reported after the groundbreaking ceremony in southeastern Tibetâs Nyingchi.
Once built, the dam could dwarf the record-breaking Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River in central China â and have a potentially serious impact on millions of people downstream in India and Bangladesh.

The project will entail constructing five hydropower stations, with the total investment estimated to be around 1.2 trillion yuan ($167.1 billion), Xinhua said.
Indian government said in January it had raised concerns with China about the project in Tibet, saying it will âmonitor and take necessary measures to protect our interestsâ.
In December, Beijingâs Foreign Ministry said that the project would not have any ânegative impactâ downstream, adding that China âwill also maintain communication with countries at the lower reachesâ of the river.
Besides downstream concerns, environmentalists have also warned about the irreversible impact of such mega projects in the ecologically sensitive Tibetan plateau.
Both India and China, neighbours and rival Asian powers, share thousands of kilometres of disputed borders, where tens of thousands of soldiers are posted on either side.
Published â July 19, 2025 05:10 pm IST