Dam insecurity
How a critically important South Asia-wide meeting on the future of large dams was scuttled because of the Government of Gujarat's influence over the Government of India.
In more ways than one, the episode that led to the cancellation of the first public hearing and other related events of the World Commission on Dams (WCD) that was to be held in India in September 1998, seems to mark a watershed in India´s, and possibly South Asia´s, experience with large water projects. This seems to be the beginning of the decline of the large dams era that started in the 1940s. What is WCD? The process of its formation started in Gland, Switzerland, in April 1997 when the World Bank called a meeting of the various ´stakeholders´ on the issue of large dams. The meeting itself was a result of the World Bank´s increasing anxiety about somehow managing the growing criticism against large dams in general and the Bank´s projects in particular. It also followed severe criticism of the Bank´s review of 50 large dams around the world, published a few months earlier. At that time, activists had suggested that if the Bank had been really interested in reviewing the performance of large dams, then it would have set up an independent commission on the subject.