Tajikistan bets on giant dam to solve electricity crisis

Tajikistan bets on giant dam to solve electricity crisis
A picture taken on November 28, 2024 shows the reservoir that will feed the under construction Rogun hydroelectric power station near the Tajik city of Rogun. (AFP)
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Updated 10 January 2025
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Tajikistan bets on giant dam to solve electricity crisis

Tajikistan bets on giant dam to solve electricity crisis
  • Tajikistan is reviving the colossal project, first planned by Soviet authorities in 1976, before being abandoned due to the end of communist rule
  • The plant will not only generate enough power to use domestically, but could supply other Central Asian countries and even Afghanistan, Pakistan

ROGUN: In a remote village in Tajikistan’s soaring mountains, Muslikhiddin Makhmudzoda relies on a mobile phone to light his modest home as his family spends another winter without electricity.
Makhmudzoda’s three children and wife were sitting huddled together to share the phone’s flashlight in their modest brick home.
A shortage of water needed to fuel hydroelectric plants has led to serious power outages in Tajikistan, a poor former Soviet republic nestled in the Central Asian mountains and surrounded by Afghanistan, China, and fellow ex-Soviet states Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan.
The power crisis is only set to worsen, as Central Asia is hard-hit by climate change.
Amid chronic shortages, Tajikistan has promised it will end the power outages and has revived a Soviet-era mega-project to build the world’s highest dam.
Makhmudzoda’s family spend much of their day without power.
“We have electricity from 5:00 am to 8:00 am and then from 5:00 p.m. until 11:00 pm,” the 28-year-old said.
To cope with intermittent power supplies, the family resorts to using a charcoal stove for heating — a risky choice, since many Tajiks die from carbon monoxide poisoning each year caused by such appliances.
Every year, the impoverished country’s state electricity company Barqi Tojik restricts power supplies starting in September to prevent the system’s collapse during the coldest months.
It says this is an “inevitable measure” as demand has skyrocketed.
Since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, the small country’s population has doubled to 10 million, with economic growth steady at around eight percent after decades of stagnation.
The rationing is also due to falling water levels in reservoirs used to drive turbines in hydroelectric power plants, which provide 95 percent of Tajikistan’s electricity.
Authorities say “feeble rainfall” means that water levels in the country’s biggest river — the Vakhsh — are low.
“Every centimeter of water counts,” Barqi Tojik has warned, urging Tajiks to pay their bills to renovate aging infrastructure.
The average salary in Tajikistan hovers around $190 (180 euros) a month.
But the government is now promising that all these inconveniences will soon be a thing of the past thanks to the construction of a massive dam and plant.
Tajikistan has placed its bets on Rogun, planned to become the most powerful hydropower plant in Central Asia. It is set to have the highest dam in the world at 335 meters (1,100 feet).
When completed, the plant is intended to produce some 3,600 megawatts — the equivalent of three nuclear power stations.
Tajikistan is reviving the colossal project, first planned by the Soviet authorities in 1976, before being abandoned due to the end of communist rule and then the Tajik civil war.
At the site, dozens of bulldozers go up and down the mountains and dozens of kilometers of underground tunnels are equipped with giant turbines.
Some 17,000 people are working on the site which lies west of the capital Dushanbe, in the foothills of the Pamir Mountains.
The site is already partially functioning but it is not known when construction will be finished.
Giant banners showing President Emomali Rahmon — in power for 32 years — hang over the construction site.
Rahmon has stressed the importance of the dam, calling it a “palace of light,” the “pride of the Tajik nation” and the “construction project of the century.”
Surrounded by giant machinery, engineer Zafar Buriyev said he was certain the dam would end power cuts.
“Once the construction at Rogun is finished, Tajikistan will completely come out of its electricity crisis,” he told AFP.
He stood in what he called “the heart of the dam” in between giant peaks.
“By next summer, this area will be submerged and the water will reach an altitude of 1,100 meters and then eventually 1,300.”
Authorities have said the plant will not only generate enough electricity to use domestically, but could supply other Central Asian countries — and even nearby Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Water resources have long been a source of tension between Central Asian countries as they suffer shortages.
The plant’s technical director Murod Sadulloyev told AFP it will help “reinforce the unified energy system” in Central Asia — a concept dating back to the USSR that enables the former Soviet republics to exchange water and electricity.
Tajikistan’s neighbors are also working to revive Soviet-era energy projects.
Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan have pledged to build the Kambar-Ata hydroelectric power plant jointly in a mountainous area of Kyrgyzstan.
Tajikistan’s Rogun project has been criticized for its constantly rising cost — currently more than $6 billion — and its environmental impact, while information on Kambar-Ata has been classified as secret.
The Central Asian power plants are being built in the context of dire climatic realities.
According to the UN, Central Asia is “warming more rapidly than the global average.”


US govt agency seeks criminal probe of Trump legal foe

US govt agency seeks criminal probe of Trump legal foe
Updated 8 sec ago
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US govt agency seeks criminal probe of Trump legal foe

US govt agency seeks criminal probe of Trump legal foe
  • Based on media reports, Ms Letitia James has, in multiple instances, falsified bank documents and property records to acquire government backed assistance

NEW YORK: A US government agency has asked for a criminal probe of New York State Attorney General Letitia James, one of President Donald Trump’s main adversaries, on grounds of alleged mortgage fraud, US media said Wednesday.
James drew the wrath of Trump after leading a civil fraud case against him that saw the Republican ordered to pay a multi-million dollar penalty last year.
Trump and allies on the right regularly attacked James during the trial in New York, and he has put revenge against his foes high on the agenda since returning to the White House in January.
US media reported the Federal Housing Finance Agency has asked the Justice Department to investigate James, alleging that she “appeared to have falsified records” related to properties she owns in Virginia and New York to obtain better loan terms.
“Attorney General James is focused every single day on protecting New Yorkers, especially as this Administration weaponizes the federal government against the rule of law and the Constitution,” her office said in a statement.
“She will not be intimidated by bullies — no matter who they are,” it added.
Neither the housing agency nor the Justice Department responded to AFP requests for comment.
“Based on media reports, Ms Letitia James has, in multiple instances, falsified bank documents and property records to acquire government backed assistance and loans and more favorable loan terms,” the housing agency wrote in its referral letter, parts of which were carried in US media.
In James’s civil case, Trump was found liable for fraud by conspiring to alter his net worth to get better loan and insurance terms. Trump and his older sons were ordered to pay $454 million.
The US president has vowed repeatedly to exact vengeance on those he feels wronged him during and following his first 2017-2021 term.
His second term in office has seen FBI and Justice Department staff involved in criminal cases against Trump fired, among other acts of retribution.


Family says ICE agents smashed car window in seizing Guatemalan man who’s seeking asylum

Family says ICE agents smashed car window in seizing Guatemalan man who’s seeking asylum
Updated 8 min 46 sec ago
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Family says ICE agents smashed car window in seizing Guatemalan man who’s seeking asylum

Family says ICE agents smashed car window in seizing Guatemalan man who’s seeking asylum
  • The incident comes as the governor and law enforcement officials in New England have raised concerns about the tactics ICE is using to detain people

NEW BEDFORD, Mass.: A Massachusetts family is demanding answers from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, complaining its agents smashed a car window with a hammer and detained a man who they claim had applied for asylum.
A lawyer for the family also claims agents were not looking for Juan Francisco Mendez when they grabbed him Monday in New Bedford, Massachusetts, as he drove to a dental appointment. The lawyer, Ondine Galvez-Sniffin, told The Associated Press during an interview that the agents claimed they were looking for another man with a different name before they dragged him and his wife out of the car.
The incident, recorded on video by Mendez’s wife Marilu Domingo Ortiz, shows ICE agents using a hammer to smash the car window and then seize Ortiz. The family believes Mendez is being held at a facility in Dover, New Hampshire.
“When I arrived on the scene, my client’s wife was sobbing. She was crying. She was shaking,” Galvez-Sniffin said, adding         athat Mendez yelled “Help Me” in Spanish as he was driven away in handcuffs.
“I walked over to the car and I see the busted window, the glass all over the back seat, and I was shocked,” the lawyer added. “I’ve been doing immigration work for 27 years and this was the first time that I saw such violent drastic measures being taken.”
A spokesman for ICE did not return repeated messages seeking comment.
Ortiz and her 9-year-old son have already been given protection under an asylum status over fears of facing persecution if they returned home to Guatemala. Mendez was in the process of applying for what is called derivative asylum, where you can get asylum if a family member already has it.
The woman said she felt “scared” when ICE broke into their car and never expected someone from her family would be detained like this.
“We came here to do honest work. To fight for our family,” Ortiz said through a translator. “What they did, or what they’re doing right now, no, it’s not fair. We don’t deserve that treatment.”
Ortiz said she was worried about the toll the detention was taking, especially on her son.
“He has already stopped eating because of what we’re going through,” she said. “I just hope that they release my husband so he can come back with us and that my son can be with him as well.”
New Bedford Mayor Jon Mitchell, in a post on X, said the incident “raises questions that require clear answers,” including why local police weren’t alerted beforehand. He also questioned whether ICE agents are targeting criminals as the Trump administration promised or, rather, “engaging in an indiscriminate round-up of individuals with uncertain immigration status.”
Galvez-Sniffin said Mendez had been in the country for four years and worked in the seafood industry in New Bedford. He had no criminal record, she said, and was in the process of applying for asylum. He had been fingerprinted in December, she said, adding nothing turned up in terms of a criminal record.
“There really was no reason to treat him the way that he and his wife were treated.” Galvez-Sniffin said, adding that agents refused to look at the paperwork showing he had applied for asylum.
“My biggest concern, his family’s biggest concern is getting him back,” she said. “He has no criminal background and everything to stay for in this country.”
The incident comes as the governor and law enforcement officials in New England have raised concerns about the tactics ICE is using to detain people.
Last month, ICE agent Brian Sullivan took Wilson Martell-Lebron, 49, into custody as he was leaving court. Boston Municipal Court Judge Mark Summerville found Sullivan in contempt, arguing that he deprived Martell-Lebron of his rights to due process and fair trial.
That case has since been dropped but the detention outside court while Martell-Lebron was on trial prompted Suffolk County District Attorney Kevin Hayden to call the actions of ICE “troubling and extraordinarily reckless.”
Tufts University student Rumeysa Ozturk of Turkiye, 30, is also challenging her detention by ICE. A video account shows her walking on a street in a Boston suburb as she is surrounded by immigration officials. Ozturk is heard screaming as they take her cellphone and is seen getting handcuffed. Her lawyers have called for her immediate release.


Global chipmakers feel the pinch of Trump’s shifting trade policy

Global chipmakers feel the pinch of Trump’s shifting trade policy
Updated 12 min 1 sec ago
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Global chipmakers feel the pinch of Trump’s shifting trade policy

Global chipmakers feel the pinch of Trump’s shifting trade policy
  • Nvidia has warned of a $5.5 billion hit after Washington restricted exports of its AI processor tailored for China
  • Tightening US export curbs have in recent years made it harder for American chipmakers to tap the Chinese market

 

Global chip stocks were battered on Wednesday on fresh evidence of how US President Donald Trump’s shifting trade policy was complicating the outlook for semiconductor and computing giants, including AI pioneer Nvidia and its rival AMD.
Attempts to reorient global trade through tariffs and export curbs have started to show the effect as Nvidia warned of a $5.5 billion hit after Washington restricted exports of its AI processor tailored for China, while Dutch chip-making tools giant ASML raised doubts about its outlook.
The US restriction, which also hit the MI308 processor of Advanced Micro Devices, marked the latest blow for the AI chip trade that is losing steam after a two-year rally as tariff threats and fears over Big Tech’s spending weigh on sentiment.
Nvidia shares closed down nearly 7 percent on Wednesday, with the company losing more than $148 billion in market value. AMD fell 5.8 percent as it warned of a $800 million hit from the latest curb, while AI-related chip stocks including Arm, Broadcom and Micron dropped between 2.5 percent and 4.6 percent.
Nvidia said on Wednesday that it follows the US government’s directions on where it can sell its chips after the US Commerce Department announced on Tuesday it was issuing new export licensing requirements for Nvidia’s H20 chips.
“The US government instructs American businesses on what they can sell and where — we follow the government’s directions to the letter,” Nvidia said.
“The technology industry supports America when it exports to well-known companies worldwide — if the government felt otherwise, it would instruct us,” the company added.

Global stock markets mostly retreated Wednesday after the US government imposed restrictions on exports of a key Nvidia chip to China, the latest trade war salvo between the world's biggest economies. (AFP)

Tightening US export curbs have in recent years made it harder for American chipmakers to tap the Chinese market, but the country remains a key source of revenue.
“The US export restrictions on Nvidia’s H20 chips highlight the growing geopolitical uncertainty enveloping the tech and semiconductor sectors, particularly under Trump-era-style policy reversals,” said Michael Ashley Schulman, chief investment officer at Running Point Capital.
“This unpredictability rattles businesses and investment markets, as evidenced by Nvidia’s selloff this morning and broader pressure across chip stocks.”
Nvidia drew over 13 percent of its sales, or about $17 billion, from China in its last financial year, although that was down from 21 percent in fiscal 2023. For AMD, China was its second-largest market last year, accounting for more than 24 percent of total sales.
“The H20 portion was about $12 billion or so (of the total China revenue), roughly about 30 cents of earnings per share, not trivial but not enormous in the grand scheme of things,” Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon said.
“H20 performance is low, well below already-available Chinese alternatives; a ban essentially simply hands the Chinese AI market over to Huawei.”
Rasgon said the move may have surprised many investors as shares had surged nearly 18 percent last week, partly due to a report that the Trump administration planned to back off from such a curb after CEO Jensen Huang attended a Mar-a-Lago dinner.
The company had earlier this week unveiled plans to build AI servers worth as much as $500 billion in the US over the next four years, a move largely seen as an overture to Trump.
Trump has for now exempted semiconductors and some other electronics from his tariffs, but he has warned that sector-specific levies will be announced in the coming weeks.
Such tariffs could cost US semiconductor equipment makers more than $1 billion a year, Reuters reported on Tuesday.

NVIDIA fallout
News of the latest export curb on Nvidia sparked a selloff in chip companies and its suppliers across the globe.
In South Korea, Samsung closed down about 3 percent, while SK Hynix closed 4 percent lower.
European chipmakers ASM International and Infineon Technologies fell more than 2 percent, while Japanese chip-testing equipment maker Advantest — an Nvidia supplier — was the Nikkei’s second-worst performer with a 5 percent tumble.

Still, some analysts said Nvidia’s overall sales have continued to surge even as the China contribution slows while chip demand remains strong from big cloud companies.
“While we acknowledge the likely impact to near-term numbers, we would stress that Blackwell shipments to core hyperscale customers remains the driver of fundamentals,” TD Cowen analysts said, referring to Nvidia’s latest line of AI systems.
 


Carney says Trump key issue in Canada’s election, while Conservative rival says country needs change

Carney says Trump key issue in Canada’s election, while Conservative rival says country needs change
Updated 28 min 21 sec ago
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Carney says Trump key issue in Canada’s election, while Conservative rival says country needs change

Carney says Trump key issue in Canada’s election, while Conservative rival says country needs change
  • Trump’s trade war and threats to make Canada the 51st state have infuriated Canadians and led to a surge in Canadian nationalism that has bolstered Liberal Party poll numbers ahead of the April 28 vote

TORONTO: Prime Minister Mark Carney said Wednesday who is best to deal with US President Donald Trump is the key question in Canada’s election while his Conservative rival argued Carney doesn’t represent change after a decade of Liberal Party rule.
Opposition Conservative Pierre Poilievre said during the French-language leaders’ debate Canada needs change and Carney is just like his predecessor Justin Trudeau.
“Mr. Poilievre is not Justin Trudeau. I’m not Justin Trudeau either. In this election the question is who is going to face Mr. Trump,” Carney said.
Trump’s trade war and threats to make Canada the 51st state have infuriated Canadians and led to a surge in Canadian nationalism that has bolstered Liberal Party poll numbers ahead of the April 28 vote.
Poilievre is imploring Canadians not to give the Liberals a fourth term. He hoped to make the election a referendum on Trudeau, whose popularity declined toward the end of his decade in power as food and housing prices rose and immigration surged.
But Trump attacked, Trudeau resigned and Carney, a two-time central banker, became Liberal party leader and prime minister after a party leadership race.
“We need change. You do not embody change,” Poilievre said to Carney.
Bloc Québécois Yves-François Blanche, whose party is losing support to Carney’s Liberals in Quebec, agreed, saying the Liberals are the same party, the same ministers and the same lawmakers and a new leader does not change that.

Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet (right) and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, the Liberal Party leader, both try to make points during the French-language federal leaders' debate in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, on April 16, 2025. (Pool via REUTERS)

But public opinion has changed. In a mid-January poll by Nanos, Liberals trailed the Conservative Party by 47 percent to 20 percent. In the latest Nanos poll released Wednesday, the Liberals led by 8 percentage points. The January poll had a margin of error 3.1 points while the latest poll had a 2.7-point margin.
The French debate was moved up by two hours to minimize a conflict with a Montreal Canadiens hockey game. The NHL team faced off against the Carolina Hurricanes at 7 p.m. ET, in a game that could clinch them a spot in the Stanley Cup playoffs.
This isn’t the first time NHL hockey has elbowed its way onto the campaign trail. During the 2011 election, former Bloc leader Gilles Duceppe asked for a debate to be postponed due to a Canadiens hockey game, and his request was granted.
The English language debate is Thursday evening.


US judge says ‘probable cause’ to hold Trump admin in contempt

US judge says ‘probable cause’ to hold Trump admin in contempt
Updated 17 April 2025
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US judge says ‘probable cause’ to hold Trump admin in contempt

US judge says ‘probable cause’ to hold Trump admin in contempt
  • Lawyers for several of the deported Venezuelans have said that their clients were not gang members, had committed no crimes and were targeted largely on the basis of their tattoos

WASHINGTON: A US judge said Wednesday he had found “probable cause” to hold President Donald Trump’s administration in contempt in a deportation case, raising the stakes in the White House’s confrontation with the justice system.
The White House said it planned an “immediate” appeal to the decision by District Judge James Boasberg, who had ordered the government to halt flights of more than 200 alleged gang Venezuelan members to El Salvador.
Boasberg issued a temporary restraining order on March 15 to halt the deportations, which were carried out under an obscure wartime law, the 1798 Alien Enemies Act, which strips away the usual legal due process.
In a written opinion, the judge cited evidence that the government had engaged in “deliberate or reckless disregard” of his order when it proceeded with the flights.
“Defendants provide no convincing reason to avoid the conclusion that appears obvious... that they deliberately flouted this Court’s written Order and, separately, its oral command that explicitly delineated what compliance entailed,” he wrote.
The administration’s actions were “sufficient for the court to conclude that probable cause exists to find the government in criminal contempt,” Boasberg wrote.
The judge said the government would be offered a final chance to “purge such contempt” or face further court action.
Since his return to the White House in January, Trump has flirted with open defiance of the judiciary following setbacks to his right-wing agenda, with deportation cases taking center stage.
“We plan to seek immediate appellate relief,” White House Communications Director Steven Cheung said in a statement after the judge’s ruling.
“The President is 100 percent committed to ensuring that terrorists and criminal illegal migrants are no longer a threat to Americans and their communities across the country.”
In invoking the Alien Enemies Act — which had only been used previously during the War of 1812, World War I and World War II — Trump said he was targeting transnational gangs he had declared foreign terrorist organizations.
That included the Venezuelan group Tren de Aragua, but lawyers for several of the deported Venezuelans have said that their clients were not gang members, had committed no crimes and were targeted largely on the basis of their tattoos.
Trump has routinely criticized rulings that curb his policies and power, and attacked the judges who issued them, including Boasberg.
The Republican president said Wednesday that US courts are “totally out of control,” writing on his Truth Social platform: “They seem to hate ‘TRUMP’ so much, that anything goes!“
His administration is also under fire over its admission that Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was living in the eastern state of Maryland and married to a US citizen, was deported to a notorious prison in El Salvador due to an “administrative error.”
A judge has ordered Trump to “facilitate” his return, an order upheld by the Supreme Court, but his government has said the court did not have the authority to order it to have him returned.
Trump has alleged that Abrego Garcia is “an MS-13 Gang Member and Foreign Terrorist from El Salvador,” while Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt claimed that he was “engaged in human trafficking.”
The man has never been charged with any crimes.