River bank instability from unsustainable sand mining in the lower Mekong River
Hackney, C; Darby, S; Parsons, D; et al.Leyland, J; Best, J; Aalto, R; Nicholas, A; Houseago, R
Date: 13 January 2020
Journal
Nature Sustainability
Publisher
Nature Research
Publisher DOI
Related links
Abstract
Recent growth of the construction industry has fuelled demand for sand, with
considerable volumes being extracted from the world’s large rivers. Sediment
transport from upstream naturally replenishes sediment stored in river beds,
but the absence of sand flux data from large rivers inhibits assessment of the
sustainability of ongoing ...
Recent growth of the construction industry has fuelled demand for sand, with
considerable volumes being extracted from the world’s large rivers. Sediment
transport from upstream naturally replenishes sediment stored in river beds,
but the absence of sand flux data from large rivers inhibits assessment of the
sustainability of ongoing sand mining. Here, we demonstrate that bedload
(0.18 Mt yr-1 ± 0.07 Mt yr-1
) is a small (1%) fraction of the total annual sediment
load of the lower Mekong River. Even when considering suspended sand (6 Mt
yr-1 ± 2 Mt), the total sand flux entering the Mekong delta (6.18 Mt yr-1 ± 2.01 Mt
yr-1
) is far less than current sand extraction rates (50 Mt yr-1
). We show that at
these current rates, river bed levels can be lowered sufficiently to induce river
bank instability, potentially damaging housing, infrastructure and threatening
lives. Our research suggests that, on the Mekong and other large rivers
subject to excessive sand mining, it is imperative to establish regulatory
frameworks that limit extraction rates to levels that permit the establishment of
a sustainable balance between the natural supply/storage of sand and the rate
at which sand is removed.
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