Peru is planning a series of huge hydroelectric dams on the 1,700-kilometer (1,056-mile) Marañón River, which begins in the Peruvian Andes and is the main source of the Amazon River. Critics say the mega-dam projects could destroy the currently free-flowing Marañón, resulting in what Peruvian engineer Jose Serra Vega calls its “biological death.”
In 2011, Peru passed a law declaring the construction of 20 dams on the main trunk of the Marañón to be in the “national interest” and that the projects will launch the country’s “long-term National Energy Revolution.” But many Peruvians following the issue believe the planned dams are less about meeting “national demand” for electricity as the law reads, and more about supplying mining companies, and exporting to neighboring countries.
According to the government, the potential maximum demand for electricity is projected to be just over 12,000 megawatts (MW) by 2025, assuming very high growth rates are maintained. But the 20 Marañón dams alone listed in the 2011 law are expected to produce more than 12,400 megawatts, and that doesn’t include the generating capacity of all the existing and other proposed dams in the Marañón Basin as a whole, and on other Peruvian rivers.
“Who is all this energy for? For people, or for the [mining] companies? The answer is: the companies,” says Milton Sanchez, from the Plataforma Interinstitucional Celendina, a coalition of some 40 grassroots organizations based in the Celendin province of the Cajamarca region, which would be heavily impacted by the dams.
Serra Vega says that the construction of just four of the dams would destroy fish migrations and stop the deposition of vital nutrient-rich sediments downriver. These soils fertilize the crops on which thousands of Peruvians depend. “Studies show that when dams are built, 90 percent of the fish disappear. The main trunk [of the river] will die,” says Serra Vega.
A 2014 report by the US-based NGO International Rivers (IR) agrees that the plans put the future of the Marañón at risk. IR used the sparse information available on the proposed dams to map potentially flooded areas. They concluded that the reservoirs created by the dams would inundate approximately 7,000 square kilometers (2,703 square miles) along 80 percent of the river’s main trunk. “The currently vibrant and free-flowing river would be almost completely drowned,” said the report.
Trouble flows downstream to the Amazon
International Rivers’ Latin America Program Coordinator Monti Aguirre told Mongabay.com that the dams have been “poorly planned” and will cause “serious problems for the entire Amazon basin.”
“There is no cumulative impact assessment, no trans-boundary environmental impact assessment, no accounting of the impact these projects would have on people’s livelihoods and food production, and no study on how climate change will affect the performance of these projects,” Aguirre said. “Serious studies could probably show that there is no need for any of them.”
Paul Little, an environmental anthropologist, says that the Marañón dams could contribute to the Amazon’s “ecosystem collapse”, especially given that neighboring countries have similar plans for other rivers that birth in the Andes and feed into the Amazon.
“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,” states a 2014 report, Mega-Development Projects in Amazonia: A geopolitical and socio environmental primer, authored by Little. “This new wave of dam building in the headwaters of the [Amazon] 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.”
Little told Mongabay.com that Peru’s plans for the Marañón could “provoke major disruptions in flooding cycles, fish migrations and sediment deposits throughout the Amazon Basin with potentially disastrous, but hitherto unknown, ecological consequences.”
“These dramatic changes in continental water and sediment flows would also hinder the human use of the rich Amazon floodplains by traditional riverine communities,” Little said.
Large dams cause multiple impacts
The negative social and environmental impacts of large dams have been acknowledged for many years. The World Commission on Dams reports that large dams are the “main physical threat” to the “degradation of watershed ecosystems” and destroy or restrict rivers’ capacities to perform crucial ecosystem services such as providing habitat for fish reproduction, nutrient recycling, water purification, soil replenishment, flood control, and mangroves and wet-lands protection.
Dams also disrupt and destroy communities, displacing between 40 and 80 million people globally. “Whole societies have lost access to natural resources and cultural heritage that were submerged by reservoirs or rivers transformed by dams,” the Commission states.
The potential social impacts of the Marañón mega-dams would be enormous, forcing thousands of people from their homes, land and sources of livelihood. Many of these people include the indigenous Awajuns and Wampis. The destruction of fish migrations and of soil nutrients would harm fishing harvests and the cultivation of crops.
Loss of unstudied biodiversity and a world-class tourist destination
The dams and vast reservoirs would submerge cloud forest, dry forest and lowland Amazon rainforest, and areas extremely rich in biodiversity and high in endemic species. Many of the endemic species -- including mammals, birds, plants, insects, reptiles and amphibians -- haven’t been studied by scientists.
German herpetologist Claudia Koch, from the Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig, discovered 14 species of reptiles and amphibians new to science in the Marañón valley in just 13 months of research. She told Mongabay.com that it isn’t clear how many endemic species would be affected or “lost forever” due to the dams, because not enough is known about the species that have been described, no less the numerous species that remain “undetected.”
“Dams will cause fragmentation and habitat loss of many endemic species with localized ranges, creating barriers for [the sharing of] their genetic pool,” said Koch, who named two of her discoveries Ameiva nodam and Ameiva aggerecusans (“reject dam” in Latin) after she learned about Peru’s plans. “It’s most likely that populations of many of the endemic species will decline in the near future,” she said. “We don’t know what will be lost if these dams are constructed.”
An embryonic tourist industry would also be wrecked. Rocky Contos, a paddling excursion organizer and director of SierraRios, a U.S.-based conservation organization, calls the Marañón the “most precious river” in Latin America and “one of the finest in the world” for rafting and kayaking.
“The Marañón is on a par with the Colorado River and the Grand Canyon but nobody recognized that before I went down it and started publicizing it a few years ago,” says Contos, who has dubbed a 550 kilometer (342 mile) stretch of the Marañón “The Grand Canyon of the Amazon.” He says building so many dams on the main trunk would be “one of the greatest environmental tragedies in human history.”
How many dams?
Strange as it may sound, the exact number of dams currently proposed for the main trunk of the Marañón isn’t clear -- making environmental and economic impact assessments difficult. The confusion is partly due to muddled policy and a lack of transparency by the Peruvian government, partly due to the fact that some of the studies on which plans are based date back more than 40 years, and partly because of the 2011 law. Some of the dams appear likely to overlap each other, and several appear to have had their names changed.
The 2011 law -- Supreme Decree No. 020-2011-EM -- calls the Marañón River Peru’s “Energy Artery” and provides names for each of the 20 proposed dams, along with the amount of electricity each one could generate. These are exactly the same 20 dams identified in a 1970s evaluation of the river’s hydroelectric potential:
- Vizcarra (140 MW)
- Llata 1 (210 MW)
- Llata 2 (200 MW)
- Puchca (140 MW)
- Yanamayo (160 MW)
- Pulperia (220 MW)
- Rupac (300 MW)
- San Pablo (390 MW)
- Patas 1 (320 MW)
- Patas 2 (240 MW)
- Chusgon (240 MW)
- Bolivar (290 MW)
- Balsas (350 MW)
- Santa Rosa (340 MW)
- Yangas (330 MW)
- Pion (350 MW)
- Cumba (410 MW)
- Rentema (1,500 MW)
- Escurrebraga (1,800 MW)
- Manseriche (4,500 MW)
The 2011 law doesn’t include one dam, simply called Marañón, which is already under construction. Nor does it include at least four others -- Veracruz, Chadin 2, Rio Grande 1 and 2 -- which are at different advanced planning stages. All of these would be on the Marañón’s main trunk. According to Serra Vega and other Peruvians following the issue, Veracruz has replaced the proposed Cumba 4 dam, and Rio Grande 1 and 2 have replaced the Balsas dam.
Moreover, the 2011 law doesn’t include four proposed dams known as Marañón 1, 2, 3 and 4 which, says Serra Vega, would also all be located on the Marañón’s main stem roughly between the proposed Patas 1 and Pulperia dams. IR’s 2014 report states that the “exact location” of these four dams isn’t known, but notes that engineers from the Generalima company were seen in the Patas 2 region in 2013, downriver from Patas 1. According to Serra Vega, Marañón 1 would effectively replace Patas 1, Marañón 2 would replace San Pablo, and Marañón 4 would replace Rupac.
In February 2015, Peru’s Ministry of Energy and Mines (MEM) confirmed that at least three of these dams have what Peruvian law calls “definitive concessions,” granted by the government and required for the development of hydro-electric projects generating more than 500 MW. As acknowledged above, one of these, Marañón, is already under construction. According to OSINERGMIN, a government body supervising investment in mining and energy, Marañón was 28 percent built as of March 2015, and scheduled to start operating in December 2016.
The other dams that have “definitive concessions” are Veracruz and Chadin 2. According to MEM, Veracruz is scheduled to be built starting in June 2017 and begin operation in 2022, while Chadin 2 is scheduled to commence construction in March 2016 and operation in 2023. The Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) for Veracruz was approved by MEM in 2013, after initially being rejected, and the EIA for Chadin 2 was approved in 2014, following extreme controversy and complaints from local people saying they had suffered intimidation, repression and criminalization of protest.
At least another two of the proposed or planned dams, Rio Grande 1 and 2, have been granted “temporary concessions,” which are required to do feasibility studies. The EIA for both dams is currently being written and two rounds of “informative workshops” with local people have been held, with similar complaints emerging of intimidation, repression and criminalization of protest. In addition, Marañón 1, 2, 3 and 4 had “temporary concessions” which have now expired, according to Serra Vega.
The most controversial proposed dams
Easily the most contentious project to date is Chadin 2, which has met with fierce local opposition and would involve flooding numerous villages and displacing more than a thousand people.
Eduar Rodas Rojas, president of the Federation of United Rondas Campesinas in Celendin, told Mongabay.com that people are opposed to Chadin 2 because the agriculturally productive Marañón valley would be flooded and fish stocks destroyed, because the intention is to generate energy to supply the highly controversial Conga mining project, because it would change “our cultures and ways of life,” and because “it will not bring us development.”
“For us the only development is looking after the land and the water,” said Rodas Rojas.
By far the biggest of the proposed dams is Manseriche, which could generate up to 7,550 MW, according to Peruvian President Ollanta Humala who offered that information during a presentation to a mining conference in Arequipa, Peru in 2013. Manseriche would impact many thousands of people, mainly indigenous Awajuns and Wampis, and could meet with far greater opposition than even Chadin 2.
In its 2014 report, IR estimated that the area flooded by a Manseriche dam generating just 4,500 MW could be 5,470 square kilometers (2,112 square miles), and its reservoir could drown an entire town and extend across the border into Ecuador. A 7,550 MW mega-dam would need to be even bigger.
Almost every Awajun and Wampis man or woman interviewed by Mongabay.com said they were opposed to, or seriously concerned about, the proposed dam at Manseriche. Some Awajuns said it could lead to conflict or a second “Baguazo,” the name given to the initially peaceful protest by thousands of Awajuns and Wampis near a town called Bagua in 2009. Things turned violent there after riot police opened fire on the protesters. More than 30 people were killed, including over 20 policemen, and more than 200 injured.
“If they try to dam Manseriche and send in the army, we would be prepared to give our lives in defense of our forest,” said Edgardo Aushuqui Taqui, former vice-president of the Aguaruna Domingush Federation, an organization representing Awajun communities immediately upriver from Manseriche. “We are not going to allow this to happen. This will be a second Bagua for us.”
Energy for the people or for mining companies?
As mentioned earlier, the intention of the Marañón dams as stated in the 2011 law is to meet “national demand,” but many Peruvians familiar with the dam projects believe that they have far more to do with supplying electricity to mining companies operating in Peru, and possibly creating an export market.
Romina Rivera Bravo, from the Lima-based civil society organization Forum Solidaridad Peru, told Mongabay.com that MEM initially considered exporting energy generated by the Marañón dams to neighboring countries, particularly Brazil, but that has now changed.
“After the scrapping [in 2014] of the Peru-Brazil energy agreement [signed in 2010], it’s known that the majority of the projects will feed into the National Interconnected Electricity System (SEIN) to meet internal demand which will benefit, among others, the extractive industries, particularly mining,” says Rivera Bravo. “But the possibility of exporting to countries such as Chile has not been abandoned.”
President Humala explicitly made the connection between the proposed Marañón dams and mining at the Arequipa conference in 2013. He presented a map showing numerous copper and gold extraction projects in northern Peru along with several of the proposed dams: Manseriche, Rentema, Chadin 2, Cumba 4 (which is now Veracruz), and Balsas (now Rio Grande 1 and 2).
“With this map we can see how we can generate around mining a center of territorial development in the northern macro-region,” Humala told conference attendees. “As we can see, gold and copper projects dominate this zone, which includes Piura, Lambayeque, Cajamarca and Trujillo. In order to operate, they need energy, and for that the construction of at least five hydroelectric power stations generating more than 10,000 MW is envisioned.”
Some Peruvians following the issue connect at least one of the dams to specific mining projects. Rodas Rojas, from the Rondas Campesinas, told Mongabay.com that energy from Chadin 2 is intended to power the “big grinding mills to be installed at Conga,” the highly controversial proposed expansion of the much-condemned Yanacocha mine run by the U.S.-based Newmont Mining Corporation. Newmont’s partners are Peru’s Minas Buenaventura and the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation, which provided funds for initial construction and expansion and has a 5 percent stake. According to Lynda Sullivan, an Irish journalist based in Cajamarca, some of the personnel involved in promoting Chadin 2 and now Rio Grande 1 and 2, are former Yanacocha employees.
Almost all of the proposed dams under “definitive” and “temporary concessions” are controlled by foreign companies. Rio Grande 1 and 2 are under the direction of Odebrecht Energy Peru, a subsidiary of the giant Brazilian group Odebrecht, while Chadin 2 is under the auspices of AC Energy, another Odebrecht subsidiary. Veracruz is operated by the Compania Energetica Veracruz, a subsidiary of Chile’s Enersis, which is controlled by Spain’s Endesa, which is in turn controlled by Italy’s Enel, according to BN Americas. Maranon 1, 2, 3 and 4 are all under the direction of Generalima, another En-ersis/Endesa/Enel subsidiary.
Killing the Marañón with dams?
The 20 dams proposed by the 2011 law, and the others under construction or in advanced planning stages described in this article, are all on the Marañón’s main trunk. For the Marañón Basin as a whole, including tributaries, the total number of proposed dams is much greater. According to a 2012 research paper by U.S. scientists Clinton Jenkins, with the Brazilian NGO Instituto de Pesquisas Ecológicas, and Matt Finer, now with the U.S.-based Amazon Conservation Association, the total is 39 dams, but that doesn’t include Rio Grande 1 and 2, nor Marañón 1, 2, 3 and 4, nor Vizcarra.
IR’s 2014 report highlighted the government’s serious failure to inform people about the proposed dams on the Marañón. “[T]echnical information… and the potential reservoir inundation extent of most of the projects has not been made available to the public,” IR concluded. “This lack of transparency is unacceptable, given the dramatic impacts these projects will have to local people as well as downstream ecosystems and livelihoods that currently depend on a healthy and free-flowing Marañón River.”
For more details on some of the planned or proposed dams named here -- Chadin 2, Rio Grande 1, Rio Grande 2, Manseriche, Escurrebraga and Rentema -- see forthcoming Mongabay.com articles by David Hill.
This article was written by David Hill, a contributing writer for news.mongabay.com. This article was republished with permission, original article here.