Brazil Amazon dam project suspended over concerns for indigenous people
Brazil Amazon dam project suspended over concerns for indigenous people
Licensing process for São Luiz do Tapajós dam stalled after Funai report demarcated Sawré Muybu land around river, where Munduruku people live
Bruce Douglas in Rio de Janeiro
Friday 22 April 2016 12.21 EDT
Plans to build a huge hydroelectric dam in the Amazon have been put on hold after Brazils environmental agency, Ibama, suspended the licensing process over concerns about its impact on the indigenous community in the region.
As one of the central elements of the governments project to expand hydroelectric power generation across the Amazon, the 8,000-megawatt São Luiz do Tapajós dam is slated to be Brazils second largest, after the controversial Belo Monte power plant, which finally began operating this week.
But in a letter sent this week to the heads of Eletrobrás, the state energy company, and Funai, Brazils agency on indigenous affairs, the Ibama president, Marilene Ramos, stressed the unviability of the project given the indigenous component.
Around 10,000 Munduruku people live around the river Tapajós. The dam would flood a vast area, requiring the forced removal of at least some indigenous communities, an act that is strictly prohibited by the Brazilian constitution except in cases of disease epidemics or war.
More:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/apr/22/brazil-amazon-dam-project-suspended-indigenous-munduruku-sao-luiz-do-tapajos