Commencement
of the hydropower project, China's most ambitious since the Three Gorges Dam on
the Yangtze, was seized by Chinese markets as proof of economic stimulus,
sending stock prices and bond yields higher on Monday.
Made up of five cascade hydropower stations with the
capacity to produce 300 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity annually, equal
to the amount of electricity consumed by Britain last year, the dam will be
located in the lower reaches of the Yarlung Zangbo. A section of the river
tumbles 2,000 metres (6,561 feet) in a span of 50km (31 miles), offering huge
hydropower potential.
India
and Bangladesh have already raised concerns about its possible impact
on the millions of people downstream, while NGOs warned of the risk to one of
the richest and most diverse environments on the plateau.
Beijing has said the dam will help meet power demand in
Tibet and the rest of China without having a major effect on downstream water
supplies or the environment. Operations are expected sometime in the 2030s.
China's
CSI Construction & Engineering Index jumped as much as 4% to a
seven-month high. Power Construction Corporation of China and
Arcplus Group PLC surged by their 10% daily limit.
"From an investment perspective, mature hydropower
projects offer bond-like dividends," Wang Zhuo, partner of Shanghai
Zhuozhu Investment Management said, while cautioning that speculative buying
into related stocks would inflate valuations.
The project will drive demand for construction and building
materials such as cement and civil explosives, Huatai Securities said in a note
to clients.
Shares of Beijing-listed Hunan Wuxin Tunnel Intelligent
Equipment Co, which sells tunnel construction equipment, surged 30%. So did
shares of Geokang Technologies Co, which makes intelligent monitoring
terminals.
Cement maker Xizang Tianlu Co and Tibet GaoZheng
Explosive Co, producer of civil explosive materials, both jumped their maximum
10%.
The
Chinese premier described the dam as a "project of the century" and
said special emphasis "must be placed on ecological conservation to
prevent environmental damage," Xinhua said on Saturday.
Government bond yields rose across the board on Monday, with
the most-traded 30-year treasury futures falling to five-week lows, as
investors interpreted the news as part of China's economic stimulus.
The project, overseen by the newly formed state-owned China
Yajiang Group, marks a major boost in public investment to help bolster economic
growth as current drivers show signs of faltering.
"Assuming
10 years of construction, the investment/ GDP boost could reach 120 billion
yuan (US$16.7 billion) for a single year," said Citi in a note. "The
actual economic benefits could go beyond that."
The Three Gorges, which took almost two decades to complete,
generated nearly a million jobs, state media reported, though it displaced at
least a similar number of people.
Authorities have not indicated how many people would be
displaced by the Yarlung Zangbo project.
The
Yarlung Zangbo becomes the Brahmaputra River as it leaves Tibet and flows south
into India and finally into Bangladesh. NGOs say the dam will irreversibly harm
the Tibetan Plateau and hit millions of people downstream.
The chief minister of Arunachal Pradesh, Pema Khandu, said
earlier this year that such a colossal dam barely 50km from the border could
dry out 80% of the river passing through the Indian state while potentially
inundating downstream areas in Arunachal and neighbouring Assam state.
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