“Clean Energy” Mega Project Threatens Ecosystem
Controversial “Clean Energy” Mega Project
Threatens Ecosystem and Lives in Brazil’s
Amazon
by COHA Research
Associate Leland Garivaltis
The April 20th date, already
changed from March 30th, that was scheduled for staging an
auction to bid for the rights to build and operate the
controversial Belo Monte Dam in the Brazilian state of Pará
has been further delayed due to the popularization of the
issue by such well-known figures as director James Cameron.
The increasing cost of production originally brought about
the postponement, with potential investors such as GDF Suez
(among others) threatening to back out of the auction as the
new estimated price nears 20 billion reais ($11.2 billion).
Earlier this year, the Brazilian government authorized the
initial process of the construction of the Belo Monte Dam on
the Xingú River to begin even though it has drawn heated
opposition from local communities, environmentalists and
indigenous rights activists. These groups have defended
Amazon rights for many years; however, as environmental
topics become more pressing in today’s world, the
proponents of renewable energy sources, such as
hydroelectric dams, have taken strong positions worldwide as
the Kyoto Protocol ends in 2012. Even though Brazil is
currently becoming an economic powerhouse, it maintains low
emission levels, with only 1.86 metric tons of CO2 emissions
per capita (i.e. ten times less than the United States).
Moreover, Brasília has worked toward becoming
environmentally responsible, as it voluntarily committed to
cut its emissions by approximately 40% from projected 2020
levels. Thus, the development of a hydroelectric plant
satisfies the call for clean, new energy resources while
simultaneously fulfilling the growing need for energy.
However, while the advantages behind clean, renewable energy
will be made available by the Belo Monte Dam, the dam itself
could contribute to severe flooding and wreak harm on the
ecosystems in the flood plain of the Xingú River, as well
as give off damaging amounts of methane. The flooding and
the environmental ramifications, consequently, could
profoundly affect the lives and welfare of the local
population.
Overlooked Approval of Dam Leads
to Devastation of the Indigenous Biosphere
Due
to the call for renewable energy, the Brazilian government
accelerated the development of the Belo Monte Dam. On
February 1st, the Brazilian Environmental Agency (IBAMA)
issued the first license needed for construction of a
hydroelectric plant. IBAMA has worked on this matter for
years and recently issued the license after numerous
discussions and compromises. In the months prior to
February, the process had been stalled in order to ventilate
some of the issues surrounding the long lasting effects that
the dam would have on indigenous communities. It was soon
being whispered that senior IBAMA officials had prepared
their resignation papers due to the politics and pressures
of the licensing process. This arose from the conflicting
arguments that inevitably accompany the controversial
approval process to bring the hydroelectric dam into
existence. In order for the project to effectively commence,
there are still two other environmental licenses that must
be obtained, as well as some forty conditions that the
contractors must satisfy. The government has already been
accused by the Catholic Bishop of the Xingú Prelacy for
permitting the project to move into the production stage
while overlooking the adverse effects that could jeopardize
the environment and bedevil the indigenous inhabitants who
would be forced out of their homes.
The Brazilian
Ministry of Mines and Energy stated that the dam is expected
to commence production in 2015, and it will cost around R$20
billion (US$11.2 billion at the current rates), though both
are still being disputed and subject to change. According to
Guardian News, Brazil’s Minister of Environment Carlos
Minc declared that the company that wins the contract will
have to spend around US$800 million to counter the
environmental damage anticipated by the project. Yet, Minc
was also quoted as saying that no indigenous person will be
displaced and that they will only be affected indirectly by
the project. However, other sources such as the Berkeley,
California-based NGO International Rivers have concluded
that the devastation of these tribes will be inconceivable
and vast. The natives in the Volta Grande region alongside
the Xingú River will have no water, fish or means of
transport through this region after the dam diverts the
river. The lack of accessible water will also prove
extremely detrimental to the farmers, the lack of fish will
take away a source of food, and the lack of transport will
further alienate the tribes from the outside world. A
letter, written to President Luiz Inácio Lula de Silva from
140 groups and organizations against the construction of the
dam, mentioned that, “the formation of small, stagnant
pools of water among the rocks of the Volta Grande will be a
prime environment for the proliferation of malaria and other
water-borne diseases.”
The Deceitfulness
Behind a Hydroelectric Dam
BBC News states that
the Belo Monte Dam will provide 11,000 KW of
electricity—enough energy for 23 million homes. The dam
will be the third largest in the world after the Three
Gorges in China and Itaipu in Southern Brazil. However,
while the facility will provide enough energy for 23 million
homes, the dam is not as efficient as its advocates have
claimed. It will generate less than 10% of its capacity
during the three to four months of the low-water season, and
thus will not have the ability to sustain the same amount of
power generation year-round. Due to this utterly predictable
cycle, other dams will need to be built upstream in order to
maintain a constant yearly flow at the power source.
According to Amazon Watch, an NGO fighting to protect the
rainforest and indigenous peoples living in the region, the
Brazilian government has plans to construct additional
hydroelectric facilities at Altamira (6,588 MW), Ipixuna
(1900 MW), Kakraimoro (1490 mil MW) and Jarina (620 MW).
These supplementary structures will flood various Kayapó reserves and the land of the Araweté, Assuriní and Arara native peoples. According to The Rio Times, the dam would flood 500 square kilometers of land, which is home to 24 different indigenous tribes, and would directly impact the Paquiçamba reserve of the Juruna indigenous people—thus forcing 12,000 people to relocate. Projections say that more than 6,000 km2 of forests in Altamira would be damaged, and one third of the population would be relocated with a possibility that up to 40,000 people could be displaced or greatly affected by the inauguration of the dam. Francisco Hernandez, an electrical engineer who analyzed the project observed:
Belo Monte is a project of doubtful engineering viability, an extremely complex project which would depend on the construction not only of one dam, but rather a series of large dams and dykes that would interrupt the flow of water courses over an enormous area, requiring excavation of earth and rocks on the scale of that carried out for digging the Panama Canal.
Furthermore, there are at least 70 additional dams planned for the Amazon regions of Brazil according to BBC News. Thus, it can be concluded that the installation of the primary Belo Monte Dam on the Xingú River is only the first step in a series of construction projects that will occur all along the rivers in the Amazon and will adversely affect the people while simultaneously creating dangerous assaults on the ecosystems of the Amazon rainforest itself.
Environmental
Devastation
It is evident, that the Brazilian
government has chosen to ignore the negative impacts of the
Belo Monte Dam on both the indigenous population and the
environment. The fact that the dam is likely to have a
dramatically negative effect on the environment is a paradox
in itself because it has been promoted to its own
population, as well as the international communities, as a
means to fight Brazil’s energy crisis through clean energy
production. For instance, according to the environmental
source International Rivers, Belo Monte’s energy
production process will result in the release of large
quantities of methane, a greenhouse gas that contributes to
global warming 21 times more than CO2. The methane emissions
will result from the flooding of the dam. Predictably, after
the water inundates the region, the trees and plants rot and
then, as they decay, the resulting carbon settles on the
bottom of the reservoir where it further decomposes without
the benefit of a source for oxygen. This would prevent a
build-up of dissolved methane. As the water passes through
the dam’s turbines, the previously built up methane is
released into the atmosphere as a greenhouse gas.
International Rivers, cites studies which show that through investments in energy efficiency, “Brazil could cut demand for electricity by 40% by 2020 and save $19 billion in the process. The amount of energy saved would be equivalent to 14 Belo Monte dams.” These studies raise significant questions about whether or not the Amazon rainforest and its natives should bear the burden of the dam’s negative effects for the renewable energy source that otherwise would come from the Belo Monte Dam, rather than artful conservation practices. However, since Brazil and the world have energy depletion concerns as well as fears concerning climate change, in their minds, a controversial power source like a hydroelectric dam would seem to be a clean, effective alternative at the right price.
A perfect example of a failed hydroelectric facility is the condemned Uribante reservoir-fed dam in Venezuela. Due to climate change and lack of rainfall it has failed to supply water to two thirds of the population that depends on it. Today, Hugo Chávez has declared Venezuela to be in a state of emergency because of the severe drought and is looking into wind and nuclear power to fill the new void.
Conclusion
Pressing issues concerning
the welfare of the indigenous population and environmental
protection have been prevalent for years in regards to the
planning of the Belo Monte Dam that is finally on the verge
of being launched. The Belo Monte project has been on the
drawing board for decades, but it has not been approved due
to the rejections by the environmental communities and other
agencies and organizations that have protested its designed
construction. The first license was not granted until
February 1st of this year due to the long process of
drafting agreements and obtaining signatures while creating
plans that would appropriately protect and limit the stress
affecting the native people and the environment of the
affected region. Furthermore, as Brazil continues to grow
economically and as it seeks international acknowledgement,
a project as extensive as Belo Monte will attract immense
media coverage, especially as negotiations
continue.
IBAMA’s agreement to pursue the construction
of the Belo Monte Dam has allowed the process to continue to
the next steps; it now seems as though the dam is well on
its way to construction. However, even though the dam has
made progress, it does not appear that the debates and
opposition arguments have entirely disappeared, as seen with
the recent delay. Issues faced by indigenous peoples, as
well as the ever-increasing evidence of environmental
problems that faces the world today, ensures that a fight
for the protection of those likely to be adversely affected
by its completion will continue. Nevertheless, at this
point, marginalized groups seem destined to have to face the
eventual triumph of the project despite however many
rational arguments against the resolution of Belo Monte’s
realization exist. Thus, the inevitable dismantlement
subsists at the cost of massive construction on the Xingú
River for a supposed source of clean energy.
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This analysis was
prepared by COHA Research Associate Leland
Garivaltis
Posted 15 Apr 2010
Word Count:
1900
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