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Could China’s new dam plans unleash more trouble with India?

  • Beijing has signalled that it has hydropower plans for the lower reaches of the Yarlung Tsangpo, which flows from Tibet into northeast India
  • New Delhi is concerned that Beijing could use dams and other water infrastructure as a strategic tool to expand its control over the region, analyst says.

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The Yarlung runs for about 1,625km through southeast Tibet before passing into the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh. Photo: Xinhua
Kinling Loin Hong KongandKeegan Elmerin Beijing
For much of this year, tensions between China and India have centred on a disputed section of their Himalayan border known as Ladakh.
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In June, those tensions erupted into bloody conflict, which left at least 20 Indian soldiers dead, with an undisclosed number of Chinese casualties.

But another potential area of border conflict is brewing further east where Tibet in China meets Arunachal Pradesh in India.
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The area is traversed by the 2,900km-long (1,800-mile) Yarlung Tsangpo river, known in India as the Brahmaputra, and since 2010, China has planned hydropower projects to harness energy in the middle reaches of the river.

Now Beijing has signalled that it is shifting its attention to the lower reaches of the waterway, moving closer to India.

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