The fate of the USD 3.6 billion Myitsone dam in northern Kachin state has hung in the balance since it was abruptly halted by Myanmar in 2011 following protests over environmental and safety concerns.
The hydropower project came to symbolise China's economic dominance in formerly junta-run Myanmar and now poses a delicate challenge to the country's new civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
The veteran activist is eager to prevent renewed protests at home but also wants to maintain healthy ties with top investor Beijing, which has been lobbying her government to unfreeze the project.
A commission advising Suu Kyi's administration on whether to scrap the dam submitted its first report to her government yesterday, according to the state-run Global New Light of Myanmar.
It said an environmental and social impact assessment was underway and that the commission had already met local officials and other stakeholders.
A final decision on the project's fate would take into consideration environmental costs, the "desires and opinions of local people and societies and potential effects on foreign investment", the report added.
The dam was originally designed to funnel the vast majority of its electricity back to the mainland.
China was instrumental in shielding Myanmar's former junta from international sanctions and was rewarded with lucrative concessions that often had little trickle down benefit.
Beijing is still by far Myanmar's largest foreign investor, despite democratic reforms in recent years that have seen Western firms pour in.
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