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¤ýÀÛ¼ºÀÚ ÇÑź°­½Ã¹Î
¤ýÀÛ¼ºÀÏ 2005-01-16 (ÀÏ) 17:23
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[ÃÖÇüÁöµµÀÇ¿ø¹ßÁ¦¹®] ¼ö¸®±Ç°ú ¹° ºÐÀï Çؼҹæ¾È

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´ÙÀ½Àº 10¿ù 15ÀϺÎÅÍ 10¿ù 21ÀϱîÁö ´ë¸¸¿¡¼­ ¡®´ïÀÇ ´ë¾È¡¯À» ÁÖÁ¦·Î ¿­¸®´Â °­º¸Àü¿¬´ë ±¹Á¦È¸ÀÇ¿¡¼­ ¹ßÇ¥ÇÒ È¯°æ¿îµ¿¿¬ÇÕ ¹°À§¿øÀÎ Àå¿ëâ´ÔÀÇ ¹ßÇ¥¹®À» ¼Ò°³ÇÑ´Ù.

Hantan River Dam Report

March 1, 2004
Prepared by Yong-chang Jang
A member of Green Hub: volunteers' group for international cooperation team of KFEM
Korean Federation for Environmental Movement (KFEM), Friends of the Earth Korea
yongchangjang@hotmail.com
http://greenhub.kfem.or.krEnglish edition by Naomi Park


Hantan River Dam report #1. Yunchun Dam. I would like to write a report about the Hantan River Dam issue. But, there are too many debates concerning the dam project to write about in a single short report. So I will write it in several installments. The first issue is that of the Yunchun Dam. 1. What is the Yunchun Dam? Yunchun Dam was built in 1985 on the Hantan River and was broken down in the summer (rainy season) of 1999 due to the heavy rainfall. According to the dam plan, the Hantan River Dam will be built several kilometers upstream from where the Yunchun Dam was. Thus it is important to look back on the Yunchun Dam and its failures to assess the proposed Hantan River dam project. 2. Damage from the breakdown of the Yunchun Dam in 1999. More than 700 households (according to a news report 2,000) were destroyed as well as a human casualty when the Yunchun Dam was broken down on July 31, 1999. The households filed a damage suit against Hyundai Construction Company, but to no avail. The residents said that the flood of their hometown was due to the breakdown of the Yunchun dam. However the construction company stated that as the capacity of the dam was as small as 13 million tons at the time of the breakdown, the dam could not have affected the flood and so it was really the heavy rainfall that was the decisive factor. 3. Why did the Yunchun Dam collapse? The residents insisted that the operator of the Yunchun Dam made a mistake. The floodgate of the dam was not fully opened around July 31, 1999 when the dam was collapsed. However, the Hyundai Construction Company stated once again that it was due to the heavy rainfall. The company stated that they do not have any documents showing whether the floodgate was fully opened or not, as they lost all of the documents pertaining to the breakdown of the dam. Secondly, though Hyundai said the capacity of the dam was 13 million tons, a civil group insisted that the capacity was actually 33 million tons. The civilgroup said the company changed all their documents showing the capacity after the first breakdown of the dam in 1996. With a greater capacity, we can conclude that the flood downstream of the dam was caused by the breakdown of the dam. When requested, the company said all the documents showing the capacity of the dam was lost with the breakdown of the dam. Regardless of whether the floodgate was open or not, herein lies the more important factor: the Hantan River functions as the only drainage system in the region and during a rainfall, the height of the river rises dramatically. A dam simply cannot hold the water from a heavy rainfall regardless of how large the floodgate happens to be. It is natural that the Hantan river would overwhelm any dam blocking it. 4. Worrying About Future Flooding The residents downstream of the Hantan River dam site are once again worrying about the potential damage from a dam overflow of the Hantan River dam if it were to be built. Likewise, the residents upstream on the Hantan River dam are worrying that, as any dam on the Hantan River slows down the flow of the river, the dam will also cause flooding in their home town. What is even more worrisome for the residents is the fact that in the event of a major flood resulting from the dam, they would not be compensated for the damage, as was the case for the victims of the Yunchun dam flood. To prove that the flood was caused by a dam is impossible for ordinary citizens. To make matters worse, nearly allof the Korean professionals in the industry of dam engineering profit fromdam constructors. As a result, it is extremely difficult to find an engineer willing to help the people against the dam construction company. 5. The Site of Yunchun Dam In the picture below, you can see the concrete wall on the left side of the river- this is where the Yunchun Dam was located. It was removed in 2000 at the request of residents. Without these requests, the dam would not have been removed. The river overwhelmed and subsequently overflowed the dam in 1996. Despite this, the government decided to leave the dam as it was. This explains why the dam broke down again in 1999.



Hantan River Dam Report #2. Outline of the Plan This is the second article of the Hantan River Dam plan. Here I will outline the dam plan. 1. The Ministry of Construction and Transportation (MOCT) drew up the first plan to build the Hantan River Dam in 1999 after the river overflow at the Yunchun Dam caused enormous damage to the local towns. 2. Height: 85 meters; Legnth: 705 meters; Capacity: more than 300 million tons of water. Construction Cost: 1.2 trillion Won (1 billion US$), including compensation to residents for the land and buildings to be drowned. 3. To be constructed by Daerim Industry Ltd. (Decided in November 2002). To be owned by the Korean Water Resources Company Ltd., (KOWACO, www.kowaco.or.kr), which is wholly owned by the MOCT. 4. Daerim Industry is said to have spent several billion Won (several million US$) already in designing the dam. 5. Purpose of the dam: The dam was to be built to prevent flooding and to provide water for agricultural purposes according to the original plan. The MOCT altered the proposed purpose of the dam after the Ministry of Environment suggested in August 2003 that the dam should be emptied for 350 days per year to preserve ecosystem. As a result, the dam will be built strictly for the purpose of flood prevention.

     

                                   The site for Hantan River Dam

                              The site where Yunchun Dam was
   127¡Æ east longitude  
           


               Im Jin River

The Hantan River Dam report #3. The beauty of Hantan River.


In this third part of the report on Hantan River Dam, I will show the beauty of Hantan River with some pictures I downloaded from www.hantanet.com and www.hantanlove.net, homepages of the residents against the dam project. They began to gather information on the river for use in the movement against the dam project.

The Hantan River is considered to be the Korean "Colorado River" with its steep walls and natural beauty. The scene is unique in Korea as it is the only river that flows through a volcanic region.


Hantan River Dam report #4. Why we oppose the Hantan River Dam project?

Here are the reasons why we oppose the dam project.

1.        The dam will increase the damage from floods.

As is explained above (report #1), the residents suffered damage from flood caused from breakdown of the Yunchun Dam. The residents are saying that the Hantan River Dam will result in the same damage.

2.        We will lose our hometown.

About 350 households (1,000 persons) will have to leave their hometowns. They are mostly farmers and although they will be compensated for their lost houses and land, they hold that this compensation is still not enough to enjoy their present living standard.

3.        The dam will result only in waste of money.

The dam built with 1.2 trillion Won (US$ 1 billion) does not help preventing flood. Especially as the region holds many (about 1,000) volcanic caves, it is doubtful whether the dam would be able to hold a great deal amount of water.

4.        The environmental damage

The geological feature of Hantan River is unique in Korea. (The Hantan River runs through a volcanic region.) Especially the pillar-shaped rift is going to be designed as National Natural Resources.

5.        Damage to cultural resources.

The land to be flooded by the dam isrichly endowed with valuable remains dating back from the prehistoric age. The artifacts that have yet to be discovered would thus be destroyed by the dam.

6.        Damage to regional economy

As is seen in the case of river rafting, tourism industry is precious to the region. And since the Hantan River, with its beautifulscenery, has much potential, destroying it would only hurt the tourism industry.

7.        Bombing ground

A bombing ground named "Daraktu bombing ground" that has been used for 50 years by the US army and Korean army is just 2 km upstream of the site for the dam.  The bombing ground holds a large amount of chemicals from the bombs. Thisbombing ground would be drowned out by the dam according to the plan. Thus, it would result in severe pollution of the river's water. This issue was omitted in Environmental Impact Assessment for the dam project because it is in the jurisdiction of the Army. Moreover, the dam is a vulnerable target for haphazard bombs (we have seen that misled bombs have fallen into the river, and have remained for at least 50 years).

8.        Manipulated plan.

The benefit from the dam was evaluated larger than real by the dam constructor in their plan. Many factors such as expectations for rainfall and population weremanipulated. The residents sued the KOWACO for this manipulation.

9.        Alternatives

The damage from flooding canbe alleviated by building a bank beside the river. The reason the KOWACO objects to this alternative is that the bank building is not considered to be a part of their job description.








(Site map showing the bombing ground)
                      The bombing ground that would be drowned from damming.

                The Hantan River Dam to be built.

Hantan River Dam report #5. Movements of the residents.


Here is a summary how the residents have been struggling against the dam project.

1.        The region

Three regions related to the dam issue are Pochun(150,000 population), Yunchun(50,000), and Chulwon(50,000). These regions have suffered from nearby military bases as well as the DMZ. For example, industrial developments are restricted in these regions because of military reasons. And they have suffered from the noise of military bombing and accidental explosion of bombs.

2.        The beginning of the project and the movement

The government began to consider building a new dam just after the Yunchun Dam was broken down in 1999 summer. And the residents began their movements against the plan soon after the government announced their plan in early 2000. The local governors and the local assembly have been also against the dam project since the beginning of the conflicts. And it was the local assembly that was at the heart of the Committee against the Hantan River Dam project. The Gang Won provincial governor first announced his will against the dam firstly on August 20, 2003 when 10,000 residents gathered thirdly to have the rally.

3.        Cooperation with central civic groups

The residents made a network named "National action against dams(www.nodam.or.kr)" with several civilgroups including Korean Federation for Environmental Movement(KFEM). The residents could thus learn strategies from the networking. The civil groups had already won their movement against Dong River Dam project in June 2000. But the role of these central civil groups is not considered to be an important part in the movement.

4.        Sit-in strike for several months

The residents have been active the sit-in strike since September 20, 2003. They kept the tents up until present day(March 1, 2004), by taking turns with each village. Everyday,several representatives from each village keep up their tents.

5.        Filing a lawsuit against the Ministry

The residential committee against the dam project sued the Ministry of Construction and Transportation (MOCT), Korean Water Resources Company, and the Ministry of Environment for Manipulation of the dam plan, Environmental Impact Assessment, and many other official documents on August 7, 2003 after having their hair shaved in rain in front of Presidential House.

6.        Gathering information

An impressivefeature is that the residents began gathering information on the natural and cultural resources of their region with the movement against the dam. They realized that this kind of information make would build a strong case against building a dam intheir region. The information is available in their homepages. www.hantanet.com and www.hantanlove.net

7.        Budget for the dam rejected at the National Assembly

As the budgetfor the Hantan River Dam was rejected at the National Assembly in December 2003, the residents interpreted this as the very nullification of the Hantan River Dam project. But they misread this, for the MOCT did not give up the plan but were planning on trying for the next term.

8.        The president suggests neutral assessment

The movement made a turning point on December 19, 2003 when the president Roh made a promise at the Dialogue with the Gang Won residents that he would assign the Presidential Committee for Sustainable Development (PCSD) to review the Hantan River Dam project. He suggested that the review of the dam project should be entrusted with the PCSD. If the residents agree with the process to review the dam project that the PCSD would make, thenthe residents and the government should agree with the result of the review, the President suggested. And most of the residents responded that they accepted the president's suggestion. But a local newspaper said in its editorial "Who agreed to accept the presidential suggestion? Does the applause at the Dialogue represent our agree? Shall we accept if the PCSD concluded that the dam should be built? Did we fight only to induce the presidential suggestion? Wasn't it our goal to nullify the dam project totally?"

The government is planning to legislate "A basic law to manage national conflicts" and is willing to make the Hantan River Dam an issue in the first sample of managing conflict. The PCSD will be the authority who manages the conflict under the law.











     

 

 

 

 

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