Despite International Outcry Lula Gives Green Light to Belo Monte Hydroelectric Plant

Indian protestThe president of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva signed Thursday the contracts for the Norte Energia consortium to start construction of a controversial hydroelectric dam in the Amazon basin. 

Environmental and social organizations oppose the Belo Monte hydroelectric plant, which they believe will have disastrous consequences for the region around the town of Altamira in the Amazonian state of Pará.

The contract gives the consortium of 18 firms and investment and pension funds the right to exploit for 35 years the energy potential of the plant, set on the Xingu river.

The facility is scheduled to begin operating by 2015, becoming the third-largest of its kind in the world, while the construction will generate around 20,000 jobs, according to the Brazilian Mining and Energy Ministry.

The government stressed that the original project has been changed to ease its environmental impact, and that the dam associated with the plant has been reduced by 60% so that it does not require flooding areas currently held by indigenous communities.

Despite such assurances, the ceremony attracted protests from a small group of demonstrators gathered outside the presidential palace in Brasília. On their placards, protesters changed the name from Belo Monte (Beautiful Hill) to Belo Monstro (Beautiful Monster) as a satire against the plant.

Demonstrators issued a letter signed by 56 religious, social and environmental organizations including the Roman Catholic Church. The text says the plant will be a “death sentence” for the Xingu River and will displace “thousands of people from their homes.”

“International agreements are being violated, like Convention 169 of the World Labor Organization, the United Nations’ Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the Convention on Biological Diversity,” the letter charges.

It notes that the plant is the object of 15 lawsuits that contest the construction permit issued by the Environment Ministry.

The plant, with a capacity to generate 11,233 megawatts, is expected to cost an estimated US$ 11 billion and is the biggest project of Lula’s infrastructure-based growth acceleration program. But indigenous communities vowed earlier this year to wage “war” on the plant if it is built.

“Belo Monte will dry 100 kilometers of the Xingu, a river which holds three times as many species as the whole of Europe and which feeds thousands of people,” warned Raul Silva Telles of the non- governmental organization Instituto Socioambiental. “In this area there are two indigenous tribes that feed on the river, drink from the river, bathe in the river and sail through the river”.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Venezuela in Mercosur: Problem Is Not Country But Chavez, Says Brazilian Senator

Talking about the admission of Venezuela into Mercosur, the president of the Brazilian Senate ...

Broadcasters Favor Japanese Format for Digital TV in Brazil

The discussion on what digital TV format to use in Brazil continues. Radio and ...

Brazilians Insulted That Coming Rousseff’s Trip to White House Is Not State Visit

Although relations between Brazil and the United States are supposed to be excellent when ...

In Corruption Brazil Is Not a Heavyweight

The corruption industry is worth US$ 1 trillion worldwide annually, according to the World ...

Foreign Gambling Companies Aim for the Brazilian Market

The Brazilian National Congress are deeply entrenched in talks over the legal status of ...

Brazil Greenlights Transgenics and Stem Cell Research

Brazil’s Chamber of Deputies ended the controversy over the cultivation of genetically modified seeds ...

Brazil Asked to Pay More than Double (US$ 8) for Bolivian Gas

Bolivia is asking Brazil to pay US$ 8 for the natural gas it pumps at ...

Sweet War: Don’t Go There, Brazil Warns EU on Their Plan to Export Sugar

The European Union plans to export an extra 500,000 tons of sugar because world ...

GDP, Inflation and Interest Rates Expected to Go Up in Brazil Next Year

According to a Brazil's Central Bank poll among financial experts, which is published weekly ...

Brazilian vote in referendum on guns

In Surprising Result, 64% of Brazilians Vote to Keep Their Guns

No Brazilian poll organization was able to detect how much Brazilians were against the ...