Brazil Scraps a Dam in the Amazon. There Are Dozens of Others in the Works Though

Indians fishing in the Amazon
After the environmental permitting for the São Luiz do Tapajós, Pará, hydropower dam project was called off by the Brazilian Institute for the Environment and Renewable Natural Resources (IBAMA), the government decided to suspend the project.

Mines and Energy Minister Fernando Coelho Filho said the government is indeed willing to halt all project efforts in the region. This will not create any major difficulties in an energy supply perspective, according to him, because the country has alternatives.

Despite the government’s move, Greenpeace announces it will continue to campaign against the prospects of building other dams in the Amazon region. According to Greenpeace, there still are 42 dam projects planned for the Tapajós river basin and dozens in the Amazon.

Danicley Aguiar, from Greenpeace’s Amazon campaign, says IBAMA did the right thing. “This dam poses extreme risk to biodiversity conservation in the Tapajós river and, above all, threats to the livelihoods of Munduruku indigenous people,” he said.

Indians fishing in the Amazon

He went on to say Greenpeace will continue to work to sensitize Brazilian government and society to the risks plans to expand Brazil’s hydropower capabilities in the Amazon pose to the ecological balance of the biome and the threats to the local population, especially indigenous and traditional people.

Earlier this month, IBAMA decided to call off the plant project’s environmental permitting process. According to IBAMA Chair Suely Araújo, the project and the environmental impact assessment for the plant lacked essential information required to determine the project’s environmental feasibility.

The Federal Prosecution Service (MPF) in Pará state had already recommended that IBAMA canceled environmental permitting procedures on the grounds that the project violated the constitution because it entailed the eviction of indigenous peoples.

According to the prosecutors, the project was set to drown three Munduruku villages on the Sawré Muybu Indigenous Territory.

According to Greenpeace, the cancellation provides an opportunity to reconsider Brazil’s energy model and adopt such renewable and clean sources as wind and solar power to meet the demand.

Forest Fires Up

The National Space Research Institute (INPE) registered over 53 thousand forest fires in the country up to August 5, and warns that the hot, dry weather may make things worse, in case law enforcement efforts are not increased.

Figures from the Forest Fire Monitoring Program reveal a 65% expansion in the number of fires in the country this year compared to the same period in 2015.

According to INPE, the fire season in Brazil is still in its early phase, with its peak forecast to occur in September. For this reason, the population is recommended not to set fire to vegetation in this time of year, as human action, coupled with the hot, dry weather, is among the main causes of forest fires.

The situation in Acre state, north Brazil, is considered critical. A total 844 fires were observed — three times as many as in 2015. In the neighboring state of Amazonas, the figure added up to 3,022, up 284% from last year.

The Work Group for Seasonal Climate Forecast, of the Ministry of Science, Technology, and Innovation, made estimates for the months of August, September, and October, and predict the aggravation of the drought in the southeast of the Amazon, most notably in Acre.

The climate may bring the level of water in the Acre river somewhere between 1.20 m and 1.30 m — a record low. If that proves to be the case, navigation on the river will be impacted, and the feeding of riverside communities with supplies compromised.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Caboco on a fishing trip - Photo by Maximo Anderson

In a Brazil Where Worst Is Always Coming to Worst, These Men Stand Their Ground

Brazil has made headlines recently for almost entirely negative reasons — whether it is ...

Amazon, the land of fantasy

Turning It into a Magic Place Is Not Doing the Amazon Any Good

The Amazon, perhaps more than any other region of the globe, has consistently been ...

The Finest Art

Paulo Rama is presented a double challenge. Not only does he belong to a ...

The environmental license for the Grainway project could come soon. Image courtesy of the Brazilian National Land Transportation Agency (ANTT).

Amazon Indians Living 10,000 Years in Area Want a Say in New Grainway Train Project

A controversial freight railway line that would cut through Indigenous lands in the Brazilian ...

Raoni, a 90-year-old chief of the Kayapo people known for traveling the world to raise awareness of threats to the Amazon, also slashed Bolsonaro's words

Legendary Amazon Chief Raoni Calls Brazil President a Liar for Blaming Indians for Wildfires

Brazil’s Chief Raoni Metuktire, one of the most iconic defenders of the Amazon, condemned ...

Rutian Pataxó, poses at historic center of Salvador, capital of Bahia state. Image by Raul Spinassé

Brazilian Indians Keep Their Culture Alive by Living in Big Cities

Leaning on the balcony railing at her rickety house, perched above the stairs and ...

Chief Geraldo Apurina, wife and children in front of their house - Chris Arsenault/Thomson Reuters Foundation

Indians Are the Best Answer to Save the Amazon. But There Is Less Room for Them in the New Brazil

Inside Brazil’s Indigenous Reserve 124, Chief Geraldo Apurina walks along a muddy footpath, past ...

An industrial mining operation in Brazil - Photo: Norsk Hydro ASA

Mining Is Responsible for 10 Percent of Deforestation in the Amazon

Nearly ten percent of all the deforestation occurring in the Brazilian Amazon between 2005 ...

Brazil Scolds American Scientists for Calling for Forced Contact with Amazon Indians

The Brazilian government’s Indigenous Affairs Department (FUNAI) has severely criticized the authors of a ...