I
have no words for this outrage as Sao Paulo, the largest city runs
out of water, so here is Kevin Hester:
I
have been posting for months about the never ending drought in Brazil
caused by the rampant felling of the Amazon for farming and mining.
The
reduction in the number of trees has killed the sky rivers and now 15
odd million people in Sao Paulo are suffering water restrictions and
Sao Paulo is staring down the barrel of mass riots.
What
is the Brazilian govts solution? More deforestation. This humans on
this planet have a death wish and the will have it fulfilled in the
coming decades.
I
am totally sceptical about online petitions but the info in this link
warrants a post irrespective.
---Kevin
Hester
Brazil
wants to fell millions of trees for aluminum – we say NO!
Millions
of trees are due to be axed in Amazônia to make way for dams to
generate electricity for mines and aluminum smelters. But the
indigenous Mundurukú people aren’t taking the destruction of their
ancestral land lying down – and neither should we. Please speak out
against this misguided project!
The
forests along the Tapajós are among the world’s most biodiverse.
400 fish and 390 bird species have been documented in Amazônia
National Park; rare animals such as jaguars and anteaters can also be
found here. “It would be the death of the river as it exists today
if it were dammed,” notes Maria Lucia Carvalho, head of Parque
Nacional da Amazônia.
Brazil's economy is
thirsty for energy, with electricity consumption projected to
increase by 4.5 percent a year. To meet those needs, the country is
investing in hydropower on a grand scale, which accounted for around
80 percent of its electricity generation in 2011. Despite its vast
potential, the contribution of wind and solar energy is currently
less than two percent. Nevertheless, the Brazilian government clearly
prefers building dams to setting up wind farms.
The São Luiz
do Tapajós dam will swallow forests and villages
Nearly 60 major
hydropower plants are slated for Amazônia alone. None of the major
rivers will be spared and thousands of kilometers of power lines will
cut through the forests.
The two most important
projects are Belo Monte, which is already being built despite
continued protests, and the Tapajós dam complex, which is slated to
generate more than 14,000 megawatts (MW). To put that into
perspective, a typical coal-fired power plant in the U.S. has an
output of 500 MW.
Protected
areas are delisted by decree
The Tapajós
mainstream is set to be dammed in three places. This would submerge
198,400 hectares of land – an area larger than London – including
protected rainforest areas. The Brazilian government found a simple
way of dealing with the destruction of 11,000 hectares of the
Amazônia and Juruena National Parks and 23,000 hectares of the
Itaituba I and II National Forests: it delisted the areas by decree
in 2012.
Four dams are planned
for the Jamanxim, a tributary of the Tapajós. Their reservoirs would
flood a further 103,700 hectares of land – 33,216 of them in
Jamanxim National Park and 25,849 in the Jamanxim, Altamira and
Itaituba I and II National Forests.
With a capacity of
8,040 MW, the São
Luiz do Tapajós some 50 km upstream of the city Itaituba will be
the largest of the power plants. The project has progressed the
furthest and is meeting with the stiffest resistance. Once completed
– according to current plans, in 2020 – it will submerge an area
of 730 square kilometers. As if that were not enough, the project
will extend to further
tributaries of the Tapajós – three dams on the Teles Pires and
eight on the Juruena.
Indigenous
people take biologists hostage
The indigenous people
of the Mundurukú are bearing the brunt of the Brazilian energy
sector’s expansion plans. 11,600 of them live in about 120
settlements, and they have made it clear that they are prepared to
defend their home. When biologists were sent in quietly to prepare
studies for the construction of the dam in São Luiz, the Mundurukú
drove them off their land. They captured three researchers and only
released them when the
government promised to abort the studies. Shortly after they were
let go, the biologists returned, this time accompanied by special
forces and low-flying helicopters to intimidate the Mundurukú.
Theologian and journalist Edliberto Sena describes the government’s
treatment of the people as “war tactics”. The Teles Pires rapids
– the place where the world originated in the mythology of the
Mundurukú – have already been dynamited for the dam. The culture
and history of the people is inextricably linked to the site: “It’s
like blowing up Jerusalem or the Vatican,” explained Bruna Rocha,
an archaeologist.
A dubious
idea: flying the workers in by helicopter
The government’s
announcement that the projects would be realized as “platform dams”
was met with incredulity: workers and materials would be flown in by
helicopter, as is done for oil rigs, thus dispensing with access
roads, avoiding social conflict with unsolicited jobseekers and
protecting the environment. The feasibility of using helicopters to
airlift 12,000 workers, heavy machinery and enough steel and concrete
to build a dam is another question, of course.
European
contractors waiting in the wings?
Brazil’s
construction industry has a reputation for being extremely close to
the government – a U.S. study suggests a connection between
political donations and government contracts. It would be ingenuous
to believe the assertions of Brazilian companies and politicians that
the bidding processes and construction work is proceeding strictly by
the book. European companies also have to face
uncomfortable questions regarding their involvement in human rights
violations and rainforest destruction in Brazil. Siemens, Voith,
Daimler, Allianz and Munic Re are among the companies involved in the
controversial Belo Monte dam, for example. It is safe to assume that
they intend to continue profiting from the construction boom in
Amazônia while their management turn a blind eye toward the social
and environmental fallout.
Brazil has
alternatives to building new hydropower dams: Electricity generation
could be boosted significantly by upgrading existing power plants by
replacing their turbines and dredging silted reservoirs. Many
overland power lines are past their prime, resulting in transmission
losses of 20 percent. The potential of wind and solar energy has been
virtually ignored.
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