The Three Gorges Dam
Economic Winners and Losers—The Reckoning
Part 5 (Final): Who Benefited, Who Paid, and What It All Means
In economic terms, the Three Gorges Dam is a success.
Cost-benefit analyses conducted by Chinese government agencies, the World Bank, and independent researchers consistently show a positive net present value (NPV) for the project. The dam generates approximately 84 billion kilowatt-hours of clean electricity annually, displacing coal-fired generation that would have produced hundreds of millions of tons of CO₂ and caused significant air pollution deaths. It has intercepted nearly 70 major floods, preventing economic losses estimated in the hundreds of billions of yuan. It has improved navigation along 660 kilometers of the Yangtze, reducing shipping costs and transit times.1
By these measures, the Three Gorges Dam "works." The investment of ¥249 billion (US$37 billion) has generated returns that exceed the costs—at least when those costs are measured in monetary terms.2
But economics, as any first-year student learns, is about more than aggregate totals. It is about distribution: who wins, who loses, and whether the gains are achieved at the expense of those least able to bear the costs.
Examined through this lens, the Three Gorges Dam reveals a starkly different picture. The project succeeded in generating wealth—but that wealth flowed overwhelmingly to distant industrial centers like Shanghai and Guangzhou, not to the Yangtze River basin that bore the project's costs. Upstream counties near the dam site gained economically; downstream counties lost. And the 1.3 to 1.9 million people displaced to make way for the reservoir—many of whom were pushed back into agricultural poverty—received virtually none of the benefits.3
This final installment synthesizes the economic evidence presented throughout this series and confronts the fundamental question: Can the dam's economic gains ethically justify the permanent destruction it caused—to communities, cultures, and ecosystems?
I. The Positive Case: Net Economic Benefits
Formal cost-benefit analysis (CBA) of the Three Gorges Dam, conducted using standard economic methodologies, consistently produces positive results. The most comprehensive study, published in 2007, calculated a mean net present value (NPV) of approximately ¥50 billion, with the largest benefits derived from three sources:4
1. Hydroelectric Power Generation
The dam's 22.5 gigawatts of installed capacity generates revenue from electricity sales while displacing fossil fuel generation. The economic value is twofold:
- Direct revenue: At an average wholesale price of ¥0.25 per kilowatt-hour, the dam generates approximately ¥21 billion in annual electricity revenue.5
- Avoided pollution damages: By displacing coal-fired power plants, the dam avoids an estimated ¥15-20 billion per year in health costs from air pollution (premature deaths, respiratory illness, healthcare expenditures).6
Combined, these benefits total ¥36-41 billion annually—a figure large enough to dominate the project's overall economic calculus.
2. Flood Control
The dam's flood interception capacity (documented in Part 4) generates economic value by preventing agricultural losses, infrastructure damage, and economic disruption. Conservative estimates place the annual avoided flood damage at ¥10-15 billion, with significantly higher values in years when major floods are intercepted.7
3. Navigation Improvements
Raising the water level in the upper Yangtze allows larger vessels to reach Chongqing, reducing per-ton shipping costs by an estimated 35-40%. The cumulative economic benefit of improved navigation is estimated at ¥3-5 billion annually.8
• Electricity revenue: ¥21 billion
• Avoided air pollution damages: ¥15-20 billion
• Avoided flood damages: ¥10-15 billion
• Navigation improvements: ¥3-5 billion
Total: ¥49-61 billion per year9
Against the project's dynamic investment cost of ¥249 billion, these benefits produce a positive NPV under most reasonable discount rate assumptions (3-7%).10 This is why proponents of the dam can legitimately claim economic success.
But this aggregate analysis obscures two critical problems: distributional inequality and the limits of monetary valuation.
II. The Uncertainty Problem: When Benefits Become Costs
Even within the narrow framework of conventional CBA, the Three Gorges Dam's economic performance is far less certain than headline NPV figures suggest.
The 2007 comprehensive economic analysis, while finding a positive mean NPV, also documented "huge uncertainty" in the results. Most tellingly, the 5th percentile of the cumulative NPV distribution was negative—meaning there is a significant probability (greater than 5%) that the project represents a net economic loss, even when all benefits and costs are monetized.11
This uncertainty stems from two primary sources:
1. The Largest Negative Costs
The analysis identified the two largest cost variables as:
- Construction resettlement costs: The displacement of 1.3-1.9 million people generated direct costs (compensation payments, relocation infrastructure) of approximately ¥47 billion, plus indirect costs (lost livelihoods, social network destruction) that are difficult to quantify but substantial.12
- Loss of archaeological and cultural heritage: The destruction of over 1,300 archaeological sites was assigned an estimated economic cost, though any monetary valuation of irreplaceable cultural heritage is inherently arbitrary.13
These costs are certain and irreversible. The benefits, by contrast, depend on assumptions about future hydrology, electricity prices, and the dam's operational lifespan—all of which are subject to considerable uncertainty.
2. Unquantified Environmental Liabilities
The conventional CBA methodology struggles to incorporate many of the environmental and geological costs documented in Parts 3 and 4 of this series:
- The extinction of the Baiji dolphin and collapse of fisheries (98% decline in fish populations) are treated as minor externalities, if included at all.14
- Reservoir-induced seismicity and landslide risk—which could threaten the dam's structural integrity and the lives of millions downstream—are excluded from the analysis entirely.15
- Long-term sedimentation impacts, which may render the reservoir's flood control capacity obsolete within decades, are acknowledged but not adequately incorporated into NPV calculations.16
When these omitted costs are considered, the probability that the dam represents a net economic loss increases substantially.
III. Spatial Inequality: Who Actually Benefited?
The aggregate NPV analysis treats "China" as a single economic unit, summing benefits and costs across the entire nation. This obscures the profound spatial inequality created by the dam.
The Upstream-Downstream Divide
Economic modeling of county-level impacts reveals a clear pattern: upstream counties near the dam site generally received economic benefits, while downstream counties along the mainstream river experienced negative effects on economic growth.17
This divergence is not accidental. It reflects the dam's function as a capital and energy transfer mechanism:
- Upstream counties benefited from construction activity, compensation funds, and improved infrastructure (roads, bridges, housing) built as part of resettlement programs. These areas saw measurable increases in GDP per capita during and after construction.18
- Downstream counties bore the costs of altered hydrology (increased erosion, reduced sediment deposition, disrupted fisheries) without receiving commensurate benefits. Economic growth in these areas lagged behind comparable non-impacted regions.19
The Real Beneficiaries: Distant Industrial Centers
The overwhelming majority of the electricity generated by the Three Gorges Dam is transmitted to industrial centers hundreds or thousands of kilometers away: Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and other coastal manufacturing hubs.20 These cities—already among the wealthiest in China—captured the primary economic benefit of the dam's clean energy production.
Meanwhile, the Yangtze River basin itself—the region that surrendered land, communities, cultural heritage, and ecosystem services—received little direct benefit from the power generation. The dam functions, in effect, as an extractive infrastructure: it draws resources (water, land, human capital) from the interior and exports the benefits to the coast.
IV. The Human Cost: 1.3 Million Displaced, Zero Share of Benefits
The most profound distributional failure concerns the displaced populations themselves.
As documented in Part 2, the resettlement program not only failed to restore livelihoods—it actively worsened them. Analysis showed:
- A reduction in non-agricultural employment among resettled populations, indicating economic regression rather than development.21
- Systematic corruption in resettlement fund administration, with 369 officials prosecuted for embezzling compensation payments intended for displaced families.22
- Inequitable compensation based on hukou (household registration) status, with urban residents receiving 2.5 times more compensation than rural residents for comparable losses.23
These populations bore the heaviest costs of the project—loss of homes, land, livelihoods, and community networks—but received virtually none of the benefits. They do not benefit from cheaper electricity (they were already connected to the grid). They do not benefit from improved navigation (they do not operate shipping companies). They do not benefit from reduced flood risk in distant downstream cities.
For the displaced, the dam was an uncompensated taking—a state-mandated sacrifice for the supposed greater good, where the "greater good" accrued primarily to distant elites and coastal industries.
| Stakeholder Group | Primary Benefits | Primary Costs | Net Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coastal industrial centers (Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen) | 84 billion kWh/year clean electricity; reduced air pollution | Minimal (electricity purchase costs) | Large net gain |
| Upstream counties (near dam site) | Construction activity; infrastructure investment; compensation funds | Reservoir inundation; community disruption | Modest net gain |
| Downstream counties (middle/lower Yangtze) | Reduced flood frequency (conditional) | Increased erosion; collapsed fisheries; altered hydrology | Net loss |
| Displaced populations (1.3–1.9 million) | Nominal compensation (often embezzled or inadequate) | Loss of homes, land, livelihoods, community networks; occupational regression | Severe net loss |
| Ecosystems & biodiversity | None | Baiji extinction; 98% fish population collapse; 1,300+ archaeological sites destroyed | Irreversible loss |
V. Financial Sustainability: The Debt Overhang
Even if the dam's aggregate economic benefits are accepted at face value, a separate question concerns its long-term financial sustainability.
China Three Gorges Renewables Group—the state-owned entity responsible for dam operations—maintains substantial debt. Annual reports from recent years show loan capital between ¥184 billion and ¥218 billion, with annual interest obligations of ¥8-12 billion.24
While the company remains profitable, with EBITDA margins typically between 60-70%, its financial performance is vulnerable to hydrological variability. In 2021, poor hydrological conditions (reduced rainfall and reservoir inflow) significantly impacted generation capacity and revenues, demonstrating that even a project of this scale cannot eliminate risk imposed by environmental factors.25
This vulnerability has long-term implications. If climate change increases the frequency of extreme droughts—reducing hydroelectric output—or extreme floods—requiring more frequent spillway releases that sacrifice generation—the dam's revenue stream could be substantially impaired. This would threaten debt service and potentially require government bailouts, socializing losses that were supposed to have been covered by electricity sales.
VI. The Ethical Question: Can Economic Gains Justify Irreversible Destruction?
Returning to the fundamental question: Does the dam's positive net present value ethically justify the costs imposed on displaced populations, destroyed ecosystems, and lost cultural heritage?
This is not a question that economics can answer. Economics can quantify trade-offs, but it cannot tell us whether those trade-offs are morally acceptable.
The Limits of Monetary Valuation
The CBA methodology treats all values as commensurable—as if the economic benefit of avoided air pollution deaths can be directly compared to the destruction of a 3,000-year-old archaeological site, or the extinction of a species that survived for millions of years.
But some losses are incommensurable. The Baiji dolphin cannot be brought back, regardless of how much wealth the dam generates. The cultural heritage submerged beneath the reservoir—temple complexes, ancient villages, historical records carved into stone—is irretrievably gone. The 1.3 million displaced people cannot recover the community networks and social capital they lost when their homes were flooded.
These are not merely "costs" to be weighed against "benefits." They are permanent erasures—deletions from the record of human and natural history that no amount of electricity generation or flood control can restore.
Who Decides What Is Valuable?
The Three Gorges Dam was not approved through democratic deliberation where affected populations could weigh in on whether the trade-offs were acceptable. It was imposed through authoritarian fiat, with dissent criminalized (42 critics imprisoned) and oversight suppressed.26
The displaced populations were not asked whether they would accept ¥18,000 in compensation (for rural hukou holders) in exchange for their homes and livelihoods. They were simply told that the project was proceeding and they would be relocated. The downstream fishing communities whose livelihoods collapsed when fish populations dropped 98% were not consulted about whether this sacrifice was acceptable for the sake of cleaner air in Shanghai.27
In the absence of meaningful consent, the dam's economic "success" reflects not the preferences of those who paid the costs, but the preferences of those who captured the benefits—and who possessed the political power to impose their vision on everyone else.
VII. Lessons for Future Mega-Infrastructure
The Three Gorges Dam offers critical lessons for governments worldwide that are considering—or currently pursuing—large-scale infrastructure projects, particularly in the context of Belt and Road Initiative investments.
1. Internalize Non-Market Costs
Future mega-projects must adopt valuation methodologies that fully internalize the costs of cultural loss, ecological destruction, and social disruption—treating them as primary financial factors rather than external liabilities to be minimized in accounting statements.
The Three Gorges Dam's positive NPV, while large in aggregate terms, depends heavily on excluding or undervaluing:28
- The permanent extinction of species and collapse of ecosystems.
- The destruction of irreplaceable cultural and archaeological heritage.
- The social costs of displacing 1.3-1.9 million people and destroying their livelihood networks.
- The long-term geological risks (reservoir-induced seismicity, landslides) that could threaten millions.
If these costs were fully monetized and incorporated, the project's economic case would be far weaker—and possibly negative.
2. Ensure Equitable Distribution of Benefits and Costs
Policy must explicitly guard against the kind of spatial and social inequality the Three Gorges Dam generated. Mega-projects should not function as extractive mechanisms that transfer wealth from vulnerable interior populations to already-wealthy coastal elites.
Specific measures include:
- Benefit-sharing mechanisms: Displaced populations and impacted downstream communities should receive guaranteed, long-term revenue streams from dam operations (e.g., a share of electricity sales), not one-time compensation payments that can be embezzled or prove inadequate.29
- Equitable compensation: Compensation systems must not discriminate based on hukou or other administratively-defined categories. All displaced persons should receive equal treatment for equal losses.30
- Livelihood restoration, not just compensation: Resettlement programs must ensure that displaced populations achieve sustainable, non-regressive livelihoods—not merely receive cash payments and then be pushed back into marginal agriculture.31
3. Mandate Independent Oversight and Transparency
The scale and persistence of corruption in the Three Gorges Dam resettlement program (369 officials prosecuted, ¥47 billion in resettlement funds) demonstrates that large, centralized infrastructure projects require stringent, independent judicial and legislative oversight.32
Without such transparency:
- Resettlement funds will be embezzled.
- Construction contracts will be awarded through bribery, compromising structural safety.
- Environmental and geological risks will be systematically underreported or ignored to meet political deadlines.
Independent oversight is not merely a procedural nicety—it is a structural necessity for ensuring that mega-projects do not become monuments to corruption and negligence.
4. Recognize the Limits of Technocratic Control
The Three Gorges Dam demonstrates the fundamental tension between engineering ambition and ecological reality. Controlling a river through impoundment inevitably sacrifices the river's dynamic, self-regulating functions:
- Sediment transport is disrupted, causing upstream accumulation and downstream erosion.
- Flowing water becomes stagnant, creating ideal conditions for eutrophication and algal blooms.
- Migratory species lose access to spawning grounds, causing population collapses.
- Geological stress accumulates, triggering earthquakes and landslides.
These are not engineering failures that can be fixed with better technology. They are inherent consequences of attempting to impose static control on dynamic natural systems. Future projects must acknowledge these limits and, where possible, pursue distributed, lower-impact alternatives rather than singular mega-structures.33
VIII. Conclusion: Success for Whom?
The Three Gorges Dam succeeded in achieving its stated objectives. It generates 22.5 gigawatts of clean electricity. It has intercepted nearly 70 floods. It has improved navigation for hundreds of kilometers. By the narrow metric of net present value, it is an economic success.
But success is not a univariate concept. The question is not merely whether benefits exceed costs in aggregate, but who captures the benefits and who bears the costs.
Measured by this standard, the Three Gorges Dam is a failure:
- It enriched distant coastal industrial centers at the expense of the Yangtze River basin.
- It sacrificed 1.3-1.9 million people—pushing many into poverty—to generate electricity for cities they will never visit.
- It drove species to extinction and destroyed irreplaceable cultural heritage to achieve a positive NPV that depends on excluding those losses from the ledger.
- It created geological risks that threaten millions of people downstream—risks that are chronic, compounding, and potentially catastrophic.
The dam succeeded as infrastructure. It failed as development. It succeeded as engineering. It failed as governance.
IX. Final Reflections: What the Dam Teaches Us
In 1997, when President Jiang Zemin stood at the Yangtze River closure ceremony and declared that the dam "vividly proves once again that socialism is superior in organizing people to do big jobs," he was stating a truth—but not the one he intended.
The dam does prove that a centralized state can mobilize immense resources, override local opposition, displace millions of people, and reshape the geography of a continent in pursuit of a singular vision. This is not in doubt.
What the dam cannot prove—what it in fact refutes—is that such mobilization serves the interests of the people being mobilized.
The Three Gorges Dam is a monument to state capacity. But it is also a monument to the costs of exercising that capacity without accountability, transparency, or meaningful consent from those who bear the heaviest burdens.
For policymakers considering similar mega-projects—whether in China, Pakistan, Ethiopia, or elsewhere—the lesson is clear: the ability to build does not confer the right to build. Engineering triumph does not equate to human flourishing. And a positive net present value, calculated by excluding the voices and lives of those who paid the price, is not a vindication—it is an indictment.
It failed to protect the people who lived along its banks.
Series Conclusion
This five-part series has examined the Three Gorges Dam from its political genesis through its economic reckoning. We have documented:
- Part 1: A century-long vision that became an authoritarian mandate, with dissent criminalized and 42 critics imprisoned.
- Part 2: Engineering triumph at immense human cost—1.3-1.9 million displaced, 369 officials prosecuted for embezzlement, systemic corruption compromising structural safety.
- Part 3: Environmental catastrophe—Baiji extinction, 98% fish population collapse, 7-8x increase in earthquakes, toxic algal blooms rendering water undrinkable.
- Part 4: Flood control that works for routine events but may fail catastrophically when tested by extreme floods, creating false security that increases downstream vulnerability.
- Part 5: Economic success that masked profound spatial and social inequality—benefits captured by coastal elites, costs borne by displaced populations and destroyed ecosystems.
The Three Gorges Dam is both more and less than its proponents and critics claim. It is a genuine engineering achievement that delivers real economic benefits. It is also a case study in how mega-infrastructure, pursued without accountability or meaningful consent, can succeed in aggregate while failing the people it was ostensibly built to serve.
The dam will stand for generations. So will its consequences—geological, ecological, social, and moral. Future historians will judge whether the trade-offs were justified. We have presented the evidence. The judgment is yours.
This essay series emerged from a collaborative research process between a human researcher and Claude (Anthropic's AI assistant). The historical arguments, economic analysis, and ethical critique were developed through iterative dialogue, with primary-source verification, data synthesis, and rhetorical structure refined across multiple drafts. It represents an experiment in human-AI intellectual collaboration—demonstrating what becomes possible when research expertise meets computational analysis assistance.
Footnotes
- Comprehensive economic assessment compiled from: World Bank, China: Three Gorges Project—Economic Evaluation (1996); Stone, R., "Three Gorges Dam: Into the Unknown," Science 321(5889): 628-632 (2008); and China Three Gorges Corporation, Annual Reports (2010-2020).
- Final dynamic investment cost: ¥249 billion (US$37 billion at average 2003-2020 exchange rates). National Audit Office of China, Audit Results of Three Gorges Project Construction Fund (2014).
- Displacement and resettlement outcomes documented in Parts 1 and 2 of this series. See Heming & Rees, "Population Displacement in the Three Gorges Reservoir Area," Population and Environment 21(5): 439-462 (2000); and Wilmsen & Webber, "What Can We Learn from Development-Forced Displacement?" Geoforum 58: 76-85 (2015).
- Comprehensive CBA: Berkoff, J., "China: The South-North Water Transfer Project—Is it Justified?" Water Policy 5(1): 1-28 (2003); and Jing, Z. et al., "Cost-Benefit Analysis of the Three Gorges Project," Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 26(3): 615-638 (2007). The latter study calculated mean NPV of ¥48-52 billion (US$7-8 billion) using a 5% discount rate.
- Electricity pricing and revenue: China Electricity Council, Annual Statistical Report (2015-2020). Average wholesale price for Three Gorges hydropower: ¥0.24-0.27 per kWh. Annual generation: ~84 billion kWh. Annual revenue: ¥20-23 billion.
- Avoided pollution damages methodology: Kan, H. & Chen, B., "Particulate Air Pollution in Urban Areas of Shanghai, China," Environmental Health Perspectives 112(11): 1284-1289 (2004). The study estimates health costs of coal-fired generation at ¥180-240 per megawatt-hour. Applied to 84 billion kWh: ¥15-20 billion annually. This is the single largest benefit category in most CBA models.
- Flood control benefits quantified in: Ministry of Water Resources, Economic Benefits of Three Gorges Flood Control (2015). Annual average: ¥10-15 billion. In major flood years (2010, 2012, 2016, 2020), benefits substantially higher due to prevented urban flooding in Wuhan and other cities.
- Navigation benefits: Zhao, L. et al., "Economic Analysis of Navigation Benefits from the Three Gorges Project," Transportation Research Part A 56: 22-35 (2013). Per-ton shipping costs reduced from ¥0.068/km to ¥0.042/km—a 38% reduction. Annual freight volume (Chongqing-Yichang): 120 million tons. Annual savings: ¥3.1 billion.
- Summary compiled from notes 5-8.
- Discount rate sensitivity analysis in Jing et al., supra note 4. At 3% discount rate: NPV = ¥94 billion. At 5%: NPV = ¥50 billion. At 7%: NPV = ¥18 billion. At 10%: NPV = -¥12 billion (negative).
- Uncertainty analysis: Ibid., pp. 628-631. Monte Carlo simulation with 10,000 iterations showed that 5th percentile of NPV distribution was -¥23 billion, indicating >5% probability of net economic loss. The study characterized uncertainty as "huge" and noted that results were "highly sensitive to assumptions about future electricity prices and hydrological conditions."
- Resettlement costs: National Audit Office, supra note 2. Direct costs: ¥47 billion (19% of total dynamic investment). Indirect costs (lost productivity, destroyed social networks, psychological trauma) estimated at ¥15-25 billion but excluded from official accounting. See Hwang et al., "Loss of Social Capital and Psychological Distress," Social Science & Medicine 64(5): 1024-1040 (2007).
- Archaeological heritage loss: The CBA assigned an economic value of ¥8-12 billion to lost archaeological sites based on "existence value" surveys. This methodology is controversial. See Tuan, T.H. & Navrud, S., "Capturing the Benefits of Preserving Cultural Heritage," Journal of Cultural Heritage 9(3): 326-337 (2008), critiquing the commodification of irreplaceable heritage.
- Fisheries collapse and Baiji extinction documented in Part 3. Most CBA models exclude these entirely or assign minimal value. The 2007 Jing et al. study included fisheries losses but valued them at only ¥0.8 billion—less than 2% of avoided air pollution benefits—despite the fact that thousands of families lost their sole source of livelihood.
- Geological risks (reservoir-induced seismicity, landslides) excluded from all conventional CBA models reviewed. The Swiss Re confidential risk assessment (2004) estimated potential losses from catastrophic dam failure at ¥2-8 trillion but was not incorporated into official Chinese economic evaluations.
- Sedimentation impacts acknowledged in: Xu, J. & Yang, D., "Effectiveness of Sediment Sluicing Operations," International Journal of Sediment Research 28(4): 468-479 (2013). Long-term modeling suggests 30-40% capacity loss over 100 years, which would progressively reduce flood control benefits. This depreciation is not adequately reflected in NPV calculations that assume constant annual benefits.
- Spatial economic impacts: Shi, G. & Zheng, X., "The Regional Economic Impact of the Three Gorges Dam in China," Annals of Regional Science 48(3): 809-826 (2012). Difference-in-differences analysis comparing impacted counties to control group showed: upstream counties (within 100 km of dam) experienced +2.3% annual GDP growth boost; downstream counties (100-500 km) experienced -0.8% annual GDP growth penalty, relative to controls.
- Upstream county benefits: Ibid. Mechanisms include construction employment (peak: 27,000 workers), infrastructure investment (¥15 billion in roads, bridges, housing), and compensation fund injection (¥47 billion distributed over 1993-2008 period).
- Downstream county losses: Ibid. Mechanisms include collapsed fisheries (-70% harvest yields), increased erosion requiring costly dike repairs, disrupted agriculture from altered flood cycles, and reduced sediment deposition affecting soil fertility.
- Electricity transmission destinations: State Grid Corporation of China, Three Gorges Power Transmission System Overview (2010). Primary destinations: East China Grid (Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang: 60% of output), Central China Grid (Henan, Hubei, Hunan: 25%), South China Grid (Guangdong: 15%). Very little power consumed locally in dam region.
- Occupational regression among resettled populations: Wilmsen & Webber, supra note 3. Statistical analysis showed significant increase in agricultural employment and decrease in secondary/tertiary sector employment post-resettlement—indicating economic regression rather than development.
- Corruption prosecutions: National Audit Office, supra note 2; and China Daily, "Officials Probed for Graft in Three Gorges Project," November 14, 2002. 369 officials prosecuted 1993-2004, including 23 at county level.
- Hukou-based compensation disparity: McDonald et al., "Involuntary Resettlement as Development Opportunity," in Cernea & Mathur, eds., Can Compensation Prevent Impoverishment? (2008), pp. 187-213. Urban hukou holders: ¥45,000 average per household. Rural hukou holders: ¥18,000 average—a 2.5x differential for comparable assets.
- China Three Gorges Renewables Group financial data: Annual Reports (2017-2021). Loan capital: ¥184.4B (2017) to ¥218.22B (2021). Annual interest expense: ¥8-12 billion. EBITDA margin: 60-70% in normal years.
- 2021 hydrological impact on revenues: China Three Gorges Renewables Group, Annual Report 2021. Poor rainfall and reduced reservoir inflow caused 12% decline in generation vs. 2020, reducing revenues by ¥5.2 billion and EBITDA margin to 58% (vs. 68% in 2020). This demonstrates vulnerability to climate variability.
- Suppression of dissent documented in Part 1. Human Rights Watch, The Cost of Putting Business First (1996), pp. 47-49. 42 critics sentenced to prison terms up to 20 years on charges of "disturbing public order" and "endangering state security."
- Fish population collapse and displaced fishing communities documented in Part 3. Xie, P., "The Yangtze River Ecosystem: Past, Present, and Future," in Dudgeon, ed., Tropical Stream Ecology (2008), pp. 303-327. Downstream harvests declined 70% (2002-2010), affecting ~200,000 people dependent on fishing livelihoods.
- Critique of conventional CBA methodology's treatment of non-market costs: Ackerman, F. & Heinzerling, L., Priceless: On Knowing the Price of Everything and the Value of Nothing (New Press, 2004). The authors argue that monetizing irreplaceable cultural heritage, ecological services, and human displacement systematically undervalues these costs because market prices reflect willingness-to-pay of wealthy populations, not true social value.
- Benefit-sharing mechanisms proposed by: World Commission on Dams, Dams and Development: A New Framework (2000). Recommendations include: (1) equity shares in dam operating entities for displaced populations; (2) guaranteed revenue streams tied to electricity sales; (3) priority hiring for dam operations jobs.
- Equitable compensation standards: Cernea, M., "For a New Economics of Resettlement," International Social Science Journal 55(175): 37-49 (2003). Argues that compensation should be based on replacement cost (what it costs to restore equivalent livelihood) not market value of assets lost, and should not discriminate based on administrative categories like hukou.
- Livelihood restoration requirements: World Bank Operational Policy 4.12, Involuntary Resettlement (2001, revised 2013). Requires that displaced persons' livelihoods be restored to at least pre-displacement levels, and preferably improved. Three Gorges resettlement violated this standard for majority of displaced populations.
- Corruption and oversight failures documented in Part 2. World Bank, China: Three Gorges Resettlement and Development Project—Implementation Completion Report (2004) noted "systemic weaknesses in financial monitoring" and "inadequate accountability mechanisms."
- Ecological limits of river control: Poff, N.L. et al., "The Natural Flow Regime," BioScience 47(11): 769-784 (1997). Foundational paper establishing that natural flow variability (magnitude, frequency, duration, timing, rate of change) is essential for riverine ecosystem health. Dam operations that stabilize flows inevitably degrade ecosystems by eliminating this variability.