Top Banner
Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Development in Gilgit Baltistan – Root Cause for Environmental Degradation and Impacts Beyond 05 May 2011 Lakhu Luhana 1
18

Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Feb 03, 2018

Download

Documents

ĐinhAnh
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat

Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Development in Gilgit Baltistan – Root Cause for Environmental Degradation and Impacts Beyond

05 May 2011

Lakhu Luhana

1

Page 2: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Format of Presentation

�Environmental Overview of Gilgit Baltistan

�International Environmental Policy and Law

�Development OR Environmental Degradation - Major Environmental Issues & Impacts

�Environmental Impacts on Sindh�Conclusions

2

Page 3: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Environmental Overview of GilgitBaltistan

� Gilgit Baltistan in its current shape is a country on an area of about 2.5 times the size of Belgium

� It has a very fragile ecosystem established over millions of years of natural evaluation

� The region consists of valleys with rivers, streams, lakes and glaciers and tall mountains, Many unique and endangered habitats andspecies

� The second tallest mountain peak, K2� Three largest glaciers outside the polar

regions� The impact of environmental changes in Gilgit Baltistan goes

far beyond its boundaries 3

Page 4: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

International Policy and Legislation – Environmental Degradation

� United Nations High Level Threat Panel identified ten major dangers having serious potential of risk to damaging humankind and its habitat.

� Environmental degradation is at number three in that list of ten threats.

� Environmental degradation could be defined as deterioration of environment (air, water, soil), depletion of resources and loss of ecosystems and wildlife.

4

Page 5: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

International Policy and Legislation –International Environmental Law

� A number of international agreements are in place to minimize/avoid damage to the environment. Those relevant in case of Gilgit Baltistan include:

� Climate Change - United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Kyoto Protocol on Global Warming

� Sustainable Development - The Rio Declaration on Environment and Development

� Biodiversity - Convention on Biological Diversity

� Hazardous Materials and Activities - Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal

� Cultural Preservation - Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural & Natural Heritage

� Desertification - United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification

5

Page 6: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Major Causes of Environmental Degradation in Gilgit Baltistan

�The major causes of environmental degradation in Gilgit Baltistan are man-made associated with so-called development and include:� Large infrastructure projects – roads,

railway lines, gas and oil pipelines � Mining� Dams

6

Page 7: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Road and Rail Projects

� Widening Karakoram Highway from 10m to 30m and triple its transportation capacity

� High-speed train line and about20 tunnels

� Bothe projects built by China Road and Bridge Corporation

7

Page 8: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Environmental Impacts of Road, Rail, Pipelines Projects

� Melting of glaciers� Damage to sensitive ecosystems� Loss of productive agricultural lands� Resettlement of large numbers of people� Permanent disruption of local economic activities� Demographic changes� Accelerated urbanization� Introduction of disease

8

Page 9: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Gilgit Baltistan Map of Mines

9

Page 10: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Mining in Gilgit Baltistan

�Gilgit and Baltistan is very rich in mineral resources.

�Thousands of mines are spread all over GilgitBaltistan.

�The mines include gemstones, metals (gold, silver etc) and other minerals

� In recent years hundreds of mines have been leased either to China or to Pakistani authorities as a result mining activities have significantly increased 10

Page 11: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Environmental Impacts of Mining

� Removal of topsoil and vegetation

� Release of toxic chemicals into the environment affecting air, water, soil, aquatic organisms, wildlife and humans.

� Large disturbances adversely affect aquatic habitats (lakes, ponds, streams, rivers), terrestrial habitats (deserts, grasslands, forests)

� Increase risk of seismic activity

� Increase glacial melting

11

Page 12: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Dams in Gilgit Baltistan

�Environmental scientists all over world agree that dams do more harm than good

�Pakistan is following a very aggressive policy of building new dams in Gilgit and Baltistan

�Six large dams planned including Skardo(15000 MW), Diamer-Bhasha (4500 MW), Bunji(7000 MW), Yulbu (3000 MW), Raikot (675 MW), Hanzel (3000 MW), Tengus (625 MW) and Shengus (625 MW)

12

Page 13: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Environmental Impacts of Dams

� Destroying ecosystems

� Wholesale displacement of

population

� Destroying archaeological sites

� Glacial melting

� Change in weather patterns

� Mud slides

� Floods

� Droughts

� Soil erosion

� Change of earth's rotation13

Page 14: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Impacts on Sindh - 1

�River Indus is the lifeline of Sindh

�A number of mega water projects: Tarbela dam, Mangladam and numerous canals on river Indus have resulted in severe shortage of water of agriculture and drinking

14

Page 15: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Impacts on Sindh - 2

� Water has decreased by 90% down Kotri Barrage

since 1970s

� The thousands years old ecosystems have

irreversibly been damaged� The droughts are causing changes in weather

pattern

� Poverty has increased due to severe damage to agriculture

� Any new dam will be a death warrant for Sindh

Page 16: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Impacts on Sindh – 3

� Climate changes - unusual glacial melting and other abrupt weather patterns such as heavy rains cause serious natural disasters in Sindh

� After 18 years sustained drought last year Sindh saw the worst floods in its known history

� 10 million people were displaced

� Thousands of towns and villages submerged

� Over 100 billion Rs worth of crops, properties and infrastructure destroyed

� Still more than one million people are homeless

16

Page 17: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Conclusions 1

� The so-called major development projects by Pakistan in collusion with China in Gilgit Baltistanare causing severe environmental degradation.

� The activities of Pakistan are:� irreversibly damaging the thousands years old

sensitive ecosystems� Displacing local population� Destroying thousands years old archeology and

historical sites� Changing demography

17

Page 18: Gilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia · PDF fileGilgit Baltistan: A Critical but Unknown Pivot of South Asia under Threat Unrepresented Nations and Peoples

Conclusions 2

� The activities are against the international laws, agreements and conventions: Climate Change, Sustainable Development, Biodiversity, Hazardous Materials and Activities, Cultural Preservation, Desertification

� Any new dams on river Indus and its tributary rivers will be a death warrant for Sindhi people

� International community should not support or finance these projects and press upon Pakistan to stop these anti-environment projects

18