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Press Release
Belo Monte Auction Goes Forward after Court Overrules Second InjunctionApril 20, 2010 International Rivers and Amazon Watch Massive Protests Underway Today in Nine Cities in BrazilBrasilia, Brazil - Today's bidding process for the controversial Belo Monte Dam project was marked by protests and confusion as a second injunction issued late yesterday suspended the dam auction overnight, throwing the bidding process into a state of chaos just minutes before it was set to begin. Throughout Brazil, indigenous, environmental and social movements organized protests in more than nine cities in eight states. Internationally, phone calls begun pouring into Brazilian Embassies, condemning the government's interference in the judicial system and attempts to push through the project at all costs. Thousands of people including indigenous people, the Brazilian Movement of Dam-Affected People, the Landless Workers Movement, and environmentalists are engaging in coordinated simultaneous protest actions in Brasilia and in the capital cities Fortaleza, Florianópolis, Porto Alegre, Porto Velho, Belo Horizonte, Belém, Campina Grande, and the city of Altamira, which would be partially flooded by the Belo Monte reservoir. The generating capacity of Belo Monte would be the world's third highest behind Three Gorges and Itaipú dams. Two consortia vied for the rights to build the project: Norte Energia, which includes the state-owned CHESF and eight private companies; and Belo Monte Energia, which includes the state-owned Eletrosul, in addition to five private companies including mining giant Vale. Major investors such as Alcoa, GDF Suez, Odebrecht, and Camargo Corrêa chose not to participate in the bidding process due to concerns over a lack of economic viability, project delay, and interest in other mega-investments. To build Belo Monte, the winning consortium would need to dig two huge canals that would involve moving more earth than was dug for the Panama Canal to divert water from the river to an artificial reservoir. By doing so the Big Bend or Volta Grande - home to the Paquiçamba indigenous territory of the Juruna people and the Arara people - would be dried out, gravely affecting the livelihoods of indigenous and riverine families who depend on the water for subsistence. All told some 45,000 people are directly affected by the either flooding or diversion of the river. "The violation of indigenous rights is a matter of national and international concern. Brazil doesn't need the Belo Monte Dam. By investing in energy efficiency Brazil could avoid the need for as many as 14 Belo Monte dams and save billions of dollars in the process. Belo Monte Dam just doesn't make sense," said Aviva Imhof, Campaigns Director of International Rivers. Media Contacts: Verena Glass, Movimento Xingu Vivo Para Sempre: +55-11-9853-9950, veglass [at] uol [dot] com [dot] br More information: Contact us: Aviva Imhof |