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Welcome to Mekong Delta
The Mekong River is one of the
world's 10th rivers in its river
length and has great influences upon
nature and societies of the
Indo-china Peninsula. The name
"MEKONG" originate in Thai language,
Mae Nam Khong1). The source of the
Mekong River is in Tibet mountains
and is called Dza Chu River (River
of Rock). After running through very
narrow valley paralling Yangz Jiang
and Salween River, the Mekong reach
to Yung-Nan Province of China and is
called Lancang Jiang (Turbulent
River). Via Golden Triangle, the
crossing of China, Myanmer and Laos
boarder, the Mekong flow into
Vientiane Plain. The term, Lower
Mekong means downstream segment from
the point. There are some notorious
rapids for French navigation plan in
colonial period before the Mekong
get to Cambodia, and the last
segment is the Mekong Delta in Viet
Nam, which distributes grate
influeces to agriculture, especially
paddy fields there. According to a
sketch on the right, we can see this
long river with some segments
hereinafter.
The Mekong River is the heart and
soul of mainland Southeast Asia. The
12th longest river in the world, the
Mekong runs 4,800 kilometers from
its headwaters on the Tibetan
Plateau through Yunnan Province of
China, Burma, Thailand, Cambodia,
Lao PDR and Vietnam.
Over 60 million people depend on the
Mekong and its tributaries for food,
water, transport and many other
aspects of their daily lives. Its
annual flood drought cycles are
essential for the sustainable
production of rice and vegetables on
the floodplains and along the
riverbanks during the dry season.
Known as the Mother of waters, the
river supports one of the world's
most diverse fisheries, second only
to the Amazon.
This vital ecosystem and lifeblood
of the region is currently under
threat. Over the past ten years,
more than 100 large dams have been
proposed for the Mekong basin by
institutions like the Asian
Development Bank (ADB) and the
Mekong River Commission. Some of
these projects have already been
built.

One of the greatest threats is China
s plans to construct eight dams on
the Upper Mekong / Lancang. Two of
these dams have already been
completed, and construction on the
third project, Xiaowan, began in
January 2002. These dams will have
widespread impacts on the
livelihoods of Mekong communities
and on the natural ecology of the
river system.
The Mekong river is the dominant
geo-hydrologic structure in mainland
SE Asia. Recent rapid agricultural
and economic development has led to
increasing competition among
water-using sectors and countries
for these water resources. The main
issue to be addressed is how to
achieve sustainable agricultural,
fisheries and economic development,
while alleviating poverty and
preserving the unique environment
and biodiversity of the basin. This
includes determining the prospects
for increased agricultural,
fisheries and livestock
intensification, optimization of
fisheries, farming and forest
systems, measures for preserving
unique ecosystems, such as wetlands
and upland catchment areas, and
identifying efficient, equitable and
sustainable water allocation
mechanisms for agriculture,
fisheries, electricity generation,
and urban and industrial use,
acceptable to all basin
stakeholders. |