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Chile Approves HidroAysen Dam Project In Wild Patagonia Despite Major Opposition

Chile Hidroaysen Patagonia Dam Project

By MICHAEL WARREN and EVA VERGARA   05/ 9/11 08:57 PM ET   AP

SANTIAGO, Chile -- A $7 billion project to dam two of the world's wildest rivers for electricity has won environmental approval Monday from a Chilean government commission despite a groundswell of opposition.

The commissioners – all political appointees in President Sebastian Pinera's government – concluded a three-year environmental review by approving five dams on the Baker and Pascua rivers in Aysen, a mostly roadless region of remote southern Patagonia where rainfall is nearly constant and rivers plunge from Andean glaciers to the Pacific Ocean through green valleys and fjords.

Monday's vote – 11 in favor and one abstention – could prove to be pivotal for the future of Chile, which has a booming economy, vast mineral wealth and a determination to join the elite group of first-world nations.

With its energy-intensive mining industry clamoring for more power and living standards improving, some analysts say Chile must triple its capacity in just 15 years, despite having no domestic oil or natural gas. Chile imports 97 percent of its fossil fuels and depends largely on hydropower for electricity, creating a crisis when droughts drain reservoirs or faraway disputes affect energy imports.

Supporters say the economic benefits of the dam project justify carving roads through the heart of Chile's remaining wilderness and running a thousand miles (1,600 kilometers) of transmission lines to power the capital, Santiago.

The dams together could generate 2.75 gigawatts, nearly a third of central Chile's current capacity, within 12 years. The Aysen region will receive less expensive energy, jobs, scholarships and $350 million in infrastructure, including seaports and airports, said HidroAysen's executive vice president, Daniel Fernandez.

But people in the sparsely populated area are divided. Only three dozen families would be relocated, but the dams would drown 14,000 acres (5,700 hectares), require carving clear-cuts through forests, and eliminate whitewater rapids and waterfalls that attract ecotourism. They also would destroy habitat for the endangered Southern Huemul deer: Fewer than 1,000 of the diminutive animals, a national symbol, are believed to exist.

"They are all sell-outs," rancher Elisabeth "Lilli" Schindele said of the commissioners.

She lives with her husband and two young children in the Nadis, a sector that would be inundated. Their neighbors have agreed to relocation, but she doesn't want to leave the 1,235 acres (500 hectares) where they raise cattle and sheep.

"There is no land like ours," she told told The Associated Press by phone.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a lawyer for the U.S.-based National Resources Defense Council, appealed to Pinera to call off the project.

"It's the most beautiful place, I believe, on the planet," said Kennedy, who kayaks there every year. "I don't know any place like Patagonia."

Investors have spent $220 million on the project so far, but opposition has grown to 61 percent of Chileans according to the latest Ipsos Public Affairs poll, and the government is concerned about a backlash.

More than 1,000 people gathered outside the hearing in the regional hub of Coyhaique, chanting and carrying signs. Some threw rocks at the cars of commissioners, and clashed afterward with hundreds of police, who responded with a water cannon and tear gas. Several protesters were bloodied in the melee, and the commissioners were kept inside for their safety.

In downtown Santiago, several thousand people blocking a main avenue in protest also encountered tear gas and police water cannons.

Mining and Energy Minister Laurence Golborne had urged opponents to turn to the courts, and they did vow to appeal.

"We're going to keep fighting until this project is unviable," said Patricio Rodrigo, a spokesman for the Patagonia Without Dams coalition. "This project robs us of our sovereignty."

But Interior Minister Rodrigo Hinzpeter, who sent police to contain the protests, said that "the most important thing is that our country needs to grow, to progress, and for this we need energy."

Chile's decision has lessons for a world confronting a future without inexpensive fossil fuels and questioning nuclear safety. The country has abundant renewable-energy potential, from dams on its many rivers to year-round sun in its northern deserts, wind along its long Pacific coast, numerous geothermal sites and biomass from its large agricultural industry.

But Chile gets less than 5 percent of its electricity from renewable sources other than hydroelectricity, has done little to encourage efficiency, and lacks a strategy for securing future supplies, although a government commission will make such recommendations by September.

While a growing number of countries are modernizing networks to enable countless individuals with rooftop solar panels to contribute electricity, Chile's grids aren't even linked.

It's another legacy of dictator Augusto Pinochet: To encourage development and undo his socialist predecessor's attempts at land reform, he made waterways the property of the state energy company and eliminated regulations to protect competing interests. The rules remained even after the company was privatized and sold to foreigners.

As a result, Chile's rivers are the tax-free, private property of the Spanish-Italian Endesa energy company, which now has huge influence and few incentives to modernize the system in ways that would encourage competition. Colbun SA, a Chilean electricity generator, also is participating in the HidroAysen project.

"It makes no economic sense. The big energy demand is coming from the northern part of the country and the metals industry, and in those regions you already have available resources," Kennedy said. "The Atacama desert is ideally suited to solar thermal production. It's got the altitude, 365 days of sunlight a year and power lines that already exist, and in most cases you're only a few miles from the industries you're powering. The only reason these dams are being built is because of the political clout that Endesa has over the Pinera government."

Fernandez said HidroAysen will help Chile to receive the cheapest, cleanest electricity possible. Several Chilean energy experts also dismissed solar as uncompetitive and years away from relevancy, and warned that the only alternative is dirty and imported coal. Chile recently approved Latin America's largest coal-fired plant, to power a mine near the northern deserts. Two other coal plants received the OK on Friday.

Kennedy's counterpoint is a huge $2.2 billion, 2.6-gigawatt solar project being built in the Mojave desert with private money and U.S. government guarantees. It already has 20-year contracts to supply California's utilities starting in two years, much quicker than HidroAysen. "This is proven technology that is being used all over the world," he said.

Monday's dam decision may only intensify the debate. Environmentalists predict more damage from the transmission lines, which face a separate environmental review in December. Their construction could open remote Patagonia to much more development, and the area's abundant water could attract even more dams once the lines are built.

But last month's poll, which also showed 84 percent opposition to nuclear energy, suggests Chileans care more now about the environment, said Douglas Tompkins. The poll had a sampling margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

Tompkins, a clothing entrepreneur, and his wife, Kris, have used much of their fortunes from the Esprit, North Face and Patagonia companies to create Parque Pumalin, where 10,000 tourists a summer visit a nature reserve running all the way from the Argentine border to the sea. The couple have objected to letting the lines cut through the park; Fernandez cited technical reasons, not political ones, for a 100-mile (160-kilometer) undersea detour.

The battle shows Chileans can no longer trust the free market alone, Tompkins said: "The electric law in Chile is so skewed to the power companies, virtually guaranteeing inefficiencies and monopolies, that it is counterproductive to the interests of citizens and certainly counterproductive to the health of nature."

But HidroAysen's "benefits outweigh the drawbacks, from the development perspective," said Maria Isabel Gonzalez, who used to run Chile's National Energy Commission.

"This project is necessary for the country. It's not ideal that they're the same ones who already have an important percentage of the generation of the central grid – this isn't acceptable, but it's what there is," the lobbyist said.

"Chile is still a poor country, with 2.5 million poor people, and to overcome poverty we need energy, and for that reason we need to develop our own resources, the most competitive ones. ... It would be very selfish on the part of the rich countries to say, 'Look how they're destroying these uninhabited pristine areas.'"

___

Associated Press writers Eva Vergara reported from Santiago and Michael Warren from Buenos Aires, Argentina.

___

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SANTIAGO, Chile -- A $7 billion project to dam two of the world's wildest rivers for electricity has won environmental approval Monday from a Chilean government commission despite a groundswell of opp...
SANTIAGO, Chile -- A $7 billion project to dam two of the world's wildest rivers for electricity has won environmental approval Monday from a Chilean government commission despite a groundswell of opp...
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04:12 AM on 05/24/2011
To see images of the area where the dams will be built check out this free e-book http://www.westerneye.com/books/index.html
The images are breathtaking and once you see them you'll wonder how anyone could ever think of destroying what I think is one of the most beautiful areas in the world.
09:39 AM on 05/13/2011
The project EIS fails to address global warming and instability in the ice cap, most notably the increase of glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs). Seven times in the last 3 years, Lago Cachet Dos has released its entire lake volume -- ~seven billion cubic feet of water -- in about twelve hours, sending tsunamis downstream and threatening the safety of those in the watershed. This lake is upstream of Baker 2. These obvious safety concerns have been ignored.

In 2009, I led a study by a group of five MIT graduate engineering students to evaluate the environmental and safety risks of the project. Our team concluded:

* Upstream sediment deposition and downstream river bed erosion are likely at the Baker dam site. Impacts to plants and animals are sure to follow.

* The transmission line accounts for 70% of the dam’s carbon impact. Development closer to Santiago would reduce extensive deforestation and associated carbon consequences.

* Future lake temperature increases will likely increase peak discharge from Lago Cachet Dos 25-42% and lead to regular occurrence of outburst floods.

* A dam-break analysis shows high risk for the population living in the Caleta Tortel area.

* Current operations on the Río Biobío are harnessing very close to maximum power. Studies have shown energy efficiency and other renewable options are economically feasible; these options should be emphasized, particularly if Chile is to grow its low-carbon economy.

Please see http://www.waterdeva.com/blog/?p=477 for more information and a link to the final project paper.
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Jtt
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02:16 AM on 05/13/2011
Nuclear is a better option here.
11:47 AM on 05/13/2011
I have a house for sale next to Fukushima very nice price for you!
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
08:06 PM on 05/11/2011
I'm confused - is Hydro "green" or not? I need a copy of the "The Average American's Guide To Liberalism" to understand it all... So, oil is bad always, as is coal, but wind is good as long as it is offshore, but not offshore Mass, because that area is too pretty to the locals to allow for that, and solar is good, as long as no animals are displaced, and hydro is good, as long as no dams are used? I can't keep up anymore...
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blurredmolly
Ipswich, Mass. 1641
09:06 PM on 05/11/2011
then quit trying tio keep up. NATIONALIZE THE OIL SUPPLY OF THE U.S.A.
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
01:09 AM on 05/12/2011
Try to focus now - we are talking about dams here, okay? One in particular that, as/per the article, could power a significant percentage of that country, but those needs have to be balanced with a change in the landscape. Can it be? How will the general outcome of this debate down south effect our way of thinking here? Should we try to find consistency, or, as the silly, silly person remarked below, should we not strive to come up with a rational plan, sticking with inconsistent ones? Also, since you did bring it up, it is difficult to nationalize things here in the US - we have this pesky document called the Constitution, you may have heard of it, and it tends to frown on that type of thing, particularly since a significant portion of resources are privately owned. Then you have to condemn the property, and those pesky American citizens don't want to give up what they own or leave their homes, and alot of them live in "flyover" red states so they own shotguns - it's a big mess, really...
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Hopalongpoppyseed
May you reap what you sow.
12:48 AM on 05/12/2011
"I can't keep up anymore.." It is hard to keep up when all you want is simple black or white answers. "A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds..." Emerson
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
01:00 AM on 05/12/2011
And a quote to back up the inconsistencies, no less! Bravo! Not even going to try to rationalize the insanity, this hodgepodge of conflicting ideals in the green movement which has stymied any kind of progress on the alternative energy front for 20 years now? At least you are honest, and now the rest of us know how shallow the movement is, with no real desire to affect change by any set of scientific standards, because science tends to have a "foolish consistency" of thought... I am sure the climate scientists of the world will be happy to know that their work is for naught, that the average run of the mill greenie despises them for having a scientific mind full of "foolish consistency". Be proud - you just shamed yourself and everyone else in the "movement", be it the green or, in your case, bowel...
10:27 AM on 05/11/2011
Based on the low quality of HidroAysén’s environmental impact assessment and the list of procedural irregularities in the review process itself, HidroAysén’s dams should never have been approved. (http://bit.ly/j0qBca) That they were is a sad statement of the degree of influence that the private companies had over the Chilean authorities. These companies and the government have stated that mega-projects like HidroAysén are the only way for Chile to meet its future energy demand. Hinzpeter’s quote implies that the government’s priority is to build more and more generation, regardless of where it comes from – be it destructive large hydro or dirty coal.

Kennedy makes a critical point: renewable projects like solar are actually already a reality. Energy experts have demonstrated that Chile’s renewable and efficiency potential is great enough to generate as much energy as 3.5 HidroAyséns by 2025.

Hinzpeter’s quote also reveals his belief that economic growth must match energy growth, which is typical in developing countries. But Chile is an OECD country, and OECD countries diverged from that trend in the 1970s, when the energy demand growth rate became lower than the GDP growth rate. It’s time for Chile’s government to start embracing its OECD status –which was a great accomplishment– and create policies that foster less damaging and more secure energy generation. It’s also time for Chile to take its environmental laws seriously. Approving HidroAysén was a step in the wrong direction.

Amanda Maxwell, Latin America Advocate, Natural Resources Defense Council
democles
swords-r-us
09:01 AM on 05/11/2011
hmm. the southern tip of that continent has some of the most ferocious winds in the world. Sun is omnipresent in the plains of northern Chile. So, oh yes... the mining industry, which is run by American conglomerates which own the Chilean government. Right, I almost forgot. Of course you want to destroy one of the most pristine environments in the world.
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12:31 PM on 05/10/2011
And the western US is removing some, many of which have caused irreversible environmental damage. Even the lose of pacific salmon species, some rivers now w/o a single fish (salmon).

http://www.currentresults.com/Wildlife/Endangered-Species/Endangered-Fish/hundreds-801101.php
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Stephen G Ford
Not sure WHAT this is for
08:00 PM on 05/10/2011
The more I see... the more I'm convinced that it's JUST TOO LATE! We've screwed this planet up SO BADLY that there is NO WAY BACK... because any time ONE PERSON tries to do anything about it... there are 50 screaming about it COSTING TOO MUCH... or being TOO DIFFICULT! :(
The bumper sticker I saw on a kid's car saying "EARTH FIRST: We'll stripmine the other planets later!" would be FUNNY... if it weren't being PROVEN every day!
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William J Unverferth Sr
Snark attack.
12:35 PM on 05/10/2011
It's viable only if you plan to use the power as most 6 hours a day. and free to go without when the weather is cloudy. Solar is at best suplimental.
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WCPH
02:01 PM on 05/10/2011
that is a very ignorant comment, go do your homework
democles
swords-r-us
08:58 AM on 05/11/2011
Have been frozen for the last fifteen years, that could explain your comment.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
09:50 AM on 05/10/2011
I agree that it would be rather cheaper to pipe new solar thermal power south than to pipe new hydro power north