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Exhibit to shine light on dry Mekong through photos and art
published : 15 Mar 2021 at 04:30 One of the photos to be displayed. photo courtesy of SEA Junctions
The Mekong River has dropped to worrying levels, which is why The Mekong Is Blue And Dried photo exhibition might inspire the public to take the issue more seriously. It will kick off tomorrow March 16 and run until March 28 at Corner Space, 1st floor of Bangkok Art and Culture Centre, Pathumwan intersection.
Organised by SEA Junctions in collaboration with Bangkok Tribune, Thai Society of Environmental Journalists and Samdhana Institute, the exhibition features a selection of photographs and artwork that shows the environmental degradation of the river, destruction caused by dams and development, the impact on people and communities, and movements by civil groups on the issue.
Sustain What
Lines taking electricity to homes in Holmes County, Ohio Photo: Dale Willman
It’s hard to imagine a world without electricity. It powers elevators that allow us to build up, rather than out. Electricity keeps our homes at the right temperature. It helps to purify the water that we drink, and sometimes the air that we breathe. We use electricity for our phones and computers. And given the continuing growth of the Internet of Things, electricity demand will grow for many years to come. But as demand increases, so do the assaults to the system that delivers that energy the power grid.
| Mar 11, 2021
A strange thing has happened to the Mekong lately. The murky brown, sediment-rich waters that normally power down from the Tibetan Plateau through China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam have turned a very bright blue. That is, what’s left of the water.
With a dam-building race kicked into high gear by China, much of the Mekong has gone dry, affecting food sources for 60 million people who live along its banks and leaving many experts to wonder what lies ahead for one of the most important rivers on Earth.
Mar 16-28, is a storytelling initiative that uses photos and essays to highlight environmental degradation, the impact of dams, and how they have affected both the communities who depend on the river for their livelihoods and the groups advocating for sustainable change.