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A Munduruku girl at the Belo Monte hydroelectric dam - just one of 256 planned dams for Brazil, and one of 412 across the entire Amazon basin and its headwaters.
A Munduruku girl at the Belo Monte hydroelectric dam - just one of 256 planned dams for Brazil, and one of 412 across the entire Amazon basin and its headwaters. Lunae Parracho/Reuters Photograph: LUNAE PARRACHO/REUTERS
A Munduruku girl at the Belo Monte hydroelectric dam - just one of 256 planned dams for Brazil, and one of 412 across the entire Amazon basin and its headwaters. Lunae Parracho/Reuters Photograph: LUNAE PARRACHO/REUTERS

More than 400 dams planned for the Amazon and headwaters

This article is more than 9 years old

Rainforest under threat from a "hydrological experiment of continental proportions" as well as oil, gas and mining, says report

412 hydroelectric dams will be built across the Amazon basin and its headwaters if current plans are fulfilled, it was announced on 25 April in Lima, potentially leading to the "end of free-flowing rivers", contributing to "ecosystem collapse", and causing huge social problems.

Of the 412 dams already in operation, under construction or proposed, 256 are in Brazil, 77 in Peru, 55 in Ecuador, 14 in Bolivia, six in Venezuela, two in Guyana, and one each in Colombia, French Guyana and Surinam, said anthropologist Paul Little at the launch of the English version of his report Mega-Development Projects in Amazonia: A geopolitical and socioenvironmental primer.

According to Little, 151 of the 412 dams involve five of the six main rivers that drain into the Amazon after birthing in the Andes.

"The construction of many large-scale dams in the vast headwaters region of the Amazon Basin – encompassing parts of Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador and Colombia – will produce critical changes in continental water flows, with little knowledge of the ecological consequences of this policy," the report states. "This new wave of dam building in the headwaters of the Basin is a "hydrological experiment" of continental proportions, yet little is known scientifically of pan-Amazonian hydrological dynamics, creating the risk of provoking irreversible changes in rivers."

The report, co-authored and circulated by Peruvian NGO DAR, divides "mega-development projects" into two kinds: 1) infrastructure, such as the transport and electricity sectors, which in turn includes hydroelectric dams and 2) extractive, such as oil, gas and mining. The focus is on the number of current projects, the larger global financial, regional and geopolitical contexts, and the potential social and environmental impacts. It states:

The weight of these socioenvironmental impacts is distributed in an extremely unequal manner. The majority of the benefits derived from the construction of megadevelopment projects accrue to economic and political actors external to Amazonia, such as large multinational corporations, the administrative apparatus of national governments and financial institutions. The majority of negative impacts of these same mega-development projects are borne by indigenous peoples, who suffer from the invasion of their territories, and local communities, which suffer from the proliferation of serious social and health problems.

Part 2 of the report acts as a kind of "Users’ Guide" to what can be done to counter such projects and the impacts they may have, and includes proposals for a "pan-Amazonian agenda for an alternative model of development."

Here’s a selection of some of the report's most startling figures, as well as those included in an "infogram" shown by Little at the launch:

1.6 million – km2 of the Amazon covered by mining concessions.

1.1 million – km2 of the Amazon that is or is set to be included in oil and gas concessions.

407,000 – km2 of mining zones in the Amazon in indigenous territories.

281,000 – km2 of mining zones in the Amazon in "protected areas."

61,487 – km2 of the Amazon involved in the exploratory phase for oil and gas by Brazilian state company Petrobras, which has more of the Amazon than any other company.

52,974 – number of mining concessions in the Amazon.

412 – number of dams in operation, under construction or proposed in the Amazon and its headwaters.

327 – number of oil and gas blocks in the Amazon.

300 – % increase in proposed dams versus existing dams in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.

263 – number of oil and gas blocks involving the Amazon in Andean countries.

256 – number of dams in operation, under construction or proposed in the Brazilian Amazon.

151 – number of proposals for the construction of dams in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.

84 – % of the Peruvian Amazon under oil and gas concessions in 2009, marking a threefold increase since 2004.

81 – number of proposed dams for construction in the Maranon River basin alone.

80 – % of total Amazon mining concessions which are in Brazil.

40 – % of Colombian Amazon open for oil and gas development.

25 – % of oil and gas blocks in the Amazon that are currently in production.

21 – % of Amazon basin covered by mining concessions.

19 – % of mining areas in the Amazon that are in indigenous territories.

17 – number of large-scale dams planned for the Amazon.

15 – number of large-scale dams planned for the headwaters of the Amazon basin under the 2010 Peru–Brazil Energy Agreement.

15 – % of mining areas in the Amazon that are in "protected areas."

15 – % of the Amazon that is or is set to be included in oil and gas concessions.

11 – % of total Amazon mining concessions that are in Peru.

7 – number of "primary socioenvironmental impacts" caused by mega-development projects, including "potential for ecosystem collapse", "the end of free-flowing rivers", "genetic erosion", and "the forced industrialization of the jungle."

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