A Mega-Dam Dilemma in the Amazon
A huge dam on Peru's Inambari River will bring much-needed development to the region. But at what cost?
- By Clay Risen
- Photographs by Ivan Kashinsky
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2011, Subscribe
The town of Puerto Maldonado lies about 600 miles east of Lima, Peru, but locals call it the Wild West. Gold-buying offices line its main avenues. Bars fill the side streets, offering beer and cheap lomo saltado—stir-fried meat and vegetables served with rice and French fries. Miners and farmers motorbike into the sprawling central market to stock up on T-shirts and dried alpaca meat. Garbage and stray dogs fill the alleyways. There’s a pioneer cemetery on the edge of town, where its first residents are buried.
And Puerto Maldonado is booming. Officially, it has a population of 25,000, but no one can keep up with the new arrivals—hundreds each month, mostly from the Andean highlands. Residents say the town has doubled in size over the past decade. There are only a few paved roads, but asphalt crews are laying down new ones every day. Two- and three-story buildings are going up on every block.
Puerto Maldonado is the capital of Peru’s Madre de Dios region (similar to an American state), which abuts Bolivia and Brazil. The area is almost all rain forest and until recent decades was one of South America’s least populated and most inaccessible areas. But today it is a critical part of Latin America’s economic revolution. Poverty rates are dropping, consumer demand is rising and infrastructure development is on a tear. One of the biggest projects, the $2 billion Inter-oceanic Highway, is nearly complete—and runs straight through Puerto Maldonado. Once open, the highway is expected to see 400 trucks a day carrying goods from Brazil to Peruvian ports.
Later this year a consortium of Brazilian construction and energy companies plans to start building a $4 billion hydroelectric dam on the Inambari River, which starts in the Andes and empties into the Madre de Dios River near Puerto Maldonado. When the dam is completed, in four to five years, its 2,000 megawatts of installed capacity—a touch below that of the Hoover Dam—will make it the largest hydroelectric facility in Peru and the fifth-largest in all of South America.
The Inambari dam, pending environmental impact studies, will be built under an agreement signed last summer in Manaus, Brazil, by Peruvian President Alan García and Brazil’s then-president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. In a joint statement released afterward, the pair praised the deal as “an instrument of great strategic interest to both countries.” At first, most of the dam’s electricity will go to Brazil, which desperately needs power to feed its economic expansion—a projected 7.6 percent in 2011, the fastest in nearly two decades. Over 30 years, the bulk of the electricity will gradually go to Peru to meet its own growing power demands. “The reality is, every year we need more and more energy,” says Antonio Brack Egg, Peru’s environmental minister. “We need hydropower.”
But the dam will also change the Inambari’s ecosystem, already damaged by decades of logging and mining. The river level will drop, and whatever water is released will lack the nutrient-rich sediment on which the lowland wildlife—and, by extension, the Madre de Dios region—depends. Meanwhile, the 155-square-mile reservoir created behind the dam will displace about 4,000 people in at least 60 villages. And this dam is just one of dozens being planned or built in what has been called a “blue gold rush,” an infrastructure spree that is transforming the South American interior.
Development of the Amazon basin, managed correctly, could be a boon for the continent, lifting millions out of poverty and eventually bringing stability to a part of the world that has known too little of it. But in the short term it is creating new social and political tensions. How Peru balances its priorities—economic growth versus social harmony and environmental protection—will determine whether it joins the ranks of middle-class countries or is left with entrenched poverty and denuded landscapes.
Madre de Dios claims to be the biodiversity capital of the world. Fittingly, Puerto Maldonado boasts a Monument to Biodiversity. It is a tower that looms over the middle of a wide traffic circle near the center of town, with a base ringed with broad concrete buttresses, mimicking a rain forest tree. Between the buttresses are bas-relief sculptures of the region’s main activities, past and present: subsistence agriculture; rubber, timber and Brazil-nut harvesting; and gold mining—oddly human pursuits to detail on a monument to wildlife.
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Comments (11)
As you can see, this project needs a place to develop the dam. And it´s going to manage this project by 30 years. So, do you think they are going to create a crisis situation by three decades? It is just impossible. What is going to happen is this project needs to get an agreement with all villages around and fulfill all these commitments (anyway, people isn´t going to move). They don´t have any alternative. According to Peruvian legislation, population is not going to be fired from their houses, but relocated to new places in better living conditions. And obviously, the more than 50 year experience of Brazilian companies is a guarantee for managing environmental issues in the best way (In 21st Century, they must be learned, don´t they?). I see they have to carry on all their duties.
Posted by Ricardo on May 30,2011 | 10:34 PM
I think what the article says is just only a one part of the true, because as everything, it has a lot of positive things like people will get more jobs, will be economic tourism, etc. And about the nature, it will take the 7% of the nature in those few meters. And with the money that the project get, the reforestaton will come back. And I'm a native
Posted by alejandro on April 7,2011 | 12:14 AM
"What I find strange is that the government of Peru didn't finance the project themselves. The Return on investment of a dam like this is quite high and to take financing from the Brazilians means they are probably selling themselves short." Well said! But Garcia, the present President of Peru (known to have amassed a fortune while serving...as they all do) who cut this deal with the Brazilian president, knows what he is doing: don't doubt that he will be getting paid for "cutting Peru short."
Posted by Aliza on April 2,2011 | 03:08 PM
"...like the other local residents I talked to, she was happy about the hospital and the new houses the government has offered to build them farther uphill. In the meantime, there was the possibility of getting a job on a construction crew. “It will be better for us,” she said. “It will bring work.”"
This is another attempt by the government to empty out the rainforest so that the resources are more accessible to exploit. Just ask the communities in the Lima and Ica provinces, who have witnessed a mass migration of highland indigents into the coastal areas due to the promise of jobs (in the oil industry) and free housing. The jobs never materialized and the free housing consists of decaying mud brick houses with no running water or sanitation services.
Posted by Lynn Wilbur on March 20,2011 | 09:16 PM
I'm a peruvian guy and nothing about this article is true
Posted by Samuel on March 14,2011 | 08:47 PM
Fascinating news. Would love to hear the history of this development. Can you tell me who is Maria? Would love to know who is sending this information and why it got to me.
Does Maria have an e.mail address and information to be able to place her>
Posted by Sylvia A.G;abach on March 5,2011 | 09:10 PM
María: Development for whom? For the people living there, it's not that they will not have electricity after the dam is constructed, they already have electricity, but from petrol. You prefer that? You prefer illegal miners? You prefer the extraction of cashews to the indutrialization of the cashews? or the extraction of trees instead of the construction of finished goods? Nice life is good for you, but not for them? They are OK with what you idealize as an "avatar" existance, but in the practice means lifes of misery? Speak to them and you'll see that what they want is not a leftist utopia, but very concrete things, like Broadband internet, STABLE electricity for transformation of the resources, roads, etc. It's amazing to hear the "natives" shouting in the protest "access to broadband internet" and the "good hearted" leftist activists and the international NGOs hear "we want to live a "natural" and short life" Grow up! Nobody is for the destruction of the amazon jungle, but WE NEED TO GROW. It's not a question of "good" natives vs. development, but just WISE regulations. If you have good ideas about how we can live better lifes, plentiful of opportunities, the same you had when you were growing up,let us know. We as a country, need the money and the electricity. Period.
Posted by Leo on March 4,2011 | 02:46 AM
Is the results of the dam going to be similar to the Anwar dam in Egypt?
Posted by Barbara on March 3,2011 | 05:01 PM
In terms of direct economic benefit a 2000 MW dam like this brings in about 0.75 to 1 billion dollars a year just from the electricity generated. In a country where the Gross National Income is a tad under $2000 per capita, this is the equivalent of providing another 500,000 jobs..
What I find strange is that the government of Peru didn't finance the project themselves. The Return on investment of a dam like this is quite high and to take financing from the Brazilians means they are probably selling themselves short.
Posted by Sparky on March 3,2011 | 03:39 AM
Unbelievable! I actually felt that I was in this story. I have been to Puerto Maldonado for the last two years on medical missions in the native villages along the river. I actually took photographs of many of the scenes and people in this article. There doesn't seem to be any interest or even knowledge of the dam construction project in P.M. The gold-mining along the river goes on seemingly unabated (contrary to the statements in this story). The people are poor but they seem content and unworried by the world's problems. I have a great deal of respect for them and for that native people in the villages along the river. They're building a bridge across the river in P.M. They started it in 1978 and are just now finishing it. With that in mind, I'm not too concerned about this dam being finished in four years - if at all.
Posted by Michael McMorrow on February 28,2011 | 08:40 PM
"Bring much needed development?" Development for whom? The electricity from these dams is being sent to Brazil not used for the people in Peru. The people being displaced by the dam will probably still not have electricity after it is built. Not to mention the environmental toll these dams will take, which affect us all as the carbon is released when the forest is destroyed. Also, what about communities down stream who rely on the water and fish populations? I think this project is a catastrophe on every level.
Posted by Maria on February 25,2011 | 03:36 PM