AMAZONIA: PLANNING THE FINAL DESTRUCTION
Mega-Development Threatens Devastation of Indian Ecologies
(from
Native Americas: Hemispheric Journal of Indigenous Issues, Fall/Winter
2001, 450 Caldwell Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853) by Bill Weinberg
In the aftermath of the devastating September 11 terrorist attacks,
energy security and an increased reliance on Western Hemisphere sources
have been proclaimed national priorities with an unprecedented urgency.
Already, politicians are calling for expansion of the Free Trade system
and industrial penetration into the most remote regions of the American
continents-and the tentative gains of ecological protection and
indigenous land rights are likely to be dismissed as "unpatriotic"
indulgences in the new climate of war and crisis.
A week after
the attacks, US Trade Representative Robert Zoellick argued in the
Washington Post that giving President Bush "fast track" authority for
expanding the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA)-limiting
Congressional input on the trade negotiations-was an imperative
response. "Earlier enemies learned that America is the arsenal of
democracy," Zoellick wrote. "Today's enemies will learn that America is
the economic engine for freedom, opportunity and development. To that
end, US leadership in promoting the international economic and trading
system is vital. Trade is about more than economic efficiency. It
promotes the values at the heart of this protracted struggle." That same
week, Sen. Frank Murkowski of Alaska announced that the attacks mandated
opening the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) to the oil industry.
"There is no doubt that at this time of national emergency, an expedited
energy-security bill must be considered," he told the press. "Opening
ANWR will be a central element in finally reducing this country's
dangerous overdependence on unstable foreign sources of energy."
Legislators immediately added amendments to the emergency Defense
Authorization bill that would open the ANWR to exploitation.
Such impacts will be felt throughout the hemisphere. Just before the
terrorism crisis banished all other news from the headlines, it was
reported that destruction of South America's Amazon rainforest-which
scientists had recently believed to be slowing due to the demarcation of
traditional indigenous lands and crackdowns on illegal resource
exploitation-was once again rapidly accelerating. Deforestation of the
Amazon Basin jumped in 2000 to the highest level since 1995, according
to a study by Brazil's National Institute for Space Research. Some
twelve to 20 percent of the Amazon has already been deforested or
significantly degraded, and a new joint study by Brazil's National
Institute of Amazon Research and the University of Michigan, recently
published in Science, found that if road-building and industrial
development continue apace, as little as five percent of the original
forest cover could survive by 2020. But the region's governments are
actively cooperating with corporate designs to massively expand
industrial exploitation in the heralded "lung of the planet"-and this
cooperation is poised to escalate in the new atmosphere. The vast
rainforest basin faces rapid industrial encroachment from all sides-from
Brazil to the south and east, from the Andean states of Colombia,
Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia to the west, and from Venezuela to the north.
The multinational masterplan for the twenty-first century is to link
these industrial arteries, finally conquering the remaining interior
heart of the rainforest. The interlocking plans are drawn up by the same
governments and multilateral loaning agencies which mouth rhetoric about
protecting global biodiversity. The opposition has come from the
indigenous peoples who inhabit the rainforest, and their allies in the
ecology movement-and they will certainly now face greater obstacles in
making their voices heard.
Says Atossa Soltani, executive
director of Amazon Watch, a California-based group which is working to
raise public awareness of the new corporate threat to the rainforest:
"Export-oriented development is punching infrastructure such as roads,
pipelines and transmission lines into the last indigenous lands and
protected areas in the Amazon. The World Bank and the Inter-American
Development Bank get together with the energy ministers of these
countries and say, 'Lets have an integrated grid throughout South
America.' But with each new road or pipeline cut through the Amazon,
thousands of workers stay behind, resulting in massive deforestation,
prostitution, pollution of local water sources from their own
settlements. The social impacts on indigenous peoples are enormous."
THE "COLOMBIANIZATION" OF ECUADOR
For the past two years, Colombian army troops have been
evicting the U'wa Indians from their ancestral high tropical forest
lands to make way for oil exploration by the California-based Occidental
Petroleum. The government has refused to cancel the contract despite
legal challenges, international protest and the U'wa's claim that the
lease area lies entirely within their traditional homeland, although it
is just outside their officially demarcated reserve. An U'wa protest
encampment on contested lands was ejected by the military in January
2000, leaving several Indians injured. In subsequent raids on U'wa
protest encampments, tribal leaders report that two Indian children were
killed when they were driven by troops and tear gas into the Cubojon
River. This remote region of cloud forest on the east-facing Andean
foothills near the Venezuelan border was recently pristine, protecting
headwaters that feed the Orinoco, the next major river basin north of
the Amazon. But these forested mountains are now heavily militarized by
a profusion of armed groups. The area immediately to the north has
already been massively developed by oil companies, with the usual
ecological impacts compounded by Colombia's state of war. Since the
Ca–o-Limon pipeline, which delivers the resources of this region across
the Andes to the oil boomtown of Barrancabermeja, began operation in
1986, it has been bombed by the guerillas every four to six
days-spilling the equivalent of ten Exxon Valdez disasters into the
surrounding forest. In 2001 alone it has been bombed 110 times. The
region's Guahibo indigenous people have been almost entirely forced to
flee their homeland into urban poverty. The entire 5,000-strong
U'wa people pledged to commit collective suicide rather than surrender
to such a fate. The tribe received something of a reprieve in July 2001,
when Occidental announced that its first test drill in the region,
Gibraltar 1, had failed to find any oil. But exploration continues in
the region, by Occidental (nicknamed "Oxy") and other firms. And the
same issues face indigenous peoples at Oxy's new exploratory site in the
rainforest of Ecuador-which environmentalists as well as Pentagon
analysts warn may be the "next domino" to follow Colombia into crisis.
Multinational oil companies have drawn a patchwork map of exploration
and development "blocks" over Oriente, as the Ecuadorian Amazon basin
region is known. "The majority of the Ecuadorian Amazon is already under
exploration blocs," says Soltani. Unlike the ostensibly "protected"
areas which form another patchwork overt his same area, these
development blocks do not appear on the maps used by tourists. Several
blocks-including Occidental's 200,000-hectare Block 15-overlap with
Yasuni National Park. Block 15 also covers nearly all of the Limoncocha
Biological Reserve and Pa–acocha Protected Forest, a blackwater lagoon
system which is home to rare freshwater dolphins. It is also adjacent to
the Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve directly to the east.
"Obviously
protected areas don't mean the same thing in Ecuador and other Andean
nations as they do here," says Soltani. "The government controls
subsurface rights and says it makes the decision with respect to the
resources. It doesn't matter if it's a nature reserve or an indigenous
reserve. These areas aren't really protected from oil drilling and
exploitation."
Many of these same lands are demarcated as
indigenous homelands, and Occidental has won a "code of conduct"
agreement with the local Secoya and Siona indigenous peoples-although
Quichua and campesino lands at El Eden were expropriated by the
government and turned over to Occidental's block in 1999, with the
community only receiving after-the-fact compensation.Ê In her 1991 study
of oil exploitation in the region, Amazon Crude, investigator Judith
Kimerling charged that Oriente had become "an environmental free-fire
zone," with local water sources contaminated by oil and
chemicals-leading to increases in cancer, disease and birth defects-and
"black rain" falling on indigenous villages from burning waste pits.
Ostensibly, the oil concessions are granted only after consultation
with local peoples. But in nearly every case, native peoples have had to
fight to have their land rights respected. ARCO, which had development
rights to Block 24 (since sold to Burlington Resources), tried to go
around the Shuar-Achuar Indigenous Federation by dealing only with local
villages instead of the Federation government. The Federation went to
Ecuador's courts and got an injunction to stop drilling. Soltani says
the Federation is "unwavering in its opposition," and resisting
government pressure to enter the "tripartite"
government-corporate-indigenous negotiations brokered by the World Bank
and Inter-American Development Bank (IDB). "Meanwhile, the companies
can't even land their planes on Federation territory-no roads, no
drilling, nothing." The pressure on Oriente's indigenous peoples is
about to massively increase, however. Occidental is a major player in
the Heavy Crude Oilduct (OCP), a major new pipeline slated to deliver
Oriente's oil resources across the Andes to the Pacific and global
markets. The OCP has been repeatedly delayed for 10 years due political
instability and pressure from native peoples and environmentalists. But
on June 7, 2001, Ecuador's President Gustavo Noboa gave approval for the
OCP Consortium to begin construction of the $1.1 billion pipeline which
is slated to double Ecuador's oil production capacity.
The
Economic Transformation Law, or TROLE II-imposed on Ecuador by the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) as a condition of a bailout package
following the country's inability to meet payments on its $16 billion
foreign debt-mandates opening all sectors of oil development to private
companies. Ecuador's government hardly has a hand in the OCP
mega-project. The 300-mile pipeline is to deliver up to 450,000 barrels
per day from Oriente to refineries at Esmeraldas on the Pacific coast,
from where it is to be shipped out via the port of Balao. Starting at
Oriente's Lago Agrio, the OCP is to run parallel to the existing
Trans-Ecuadorian Oilduct System (SOTE) until just east of Papallacta,
then cut north of Quito across the Andes before rejoining the SOTE at La
Uni—n. This route cuts through the remote Mindo-Nambillo Cloud Forest
Reserve, a micro-region of high-biodiversity, high-altitude jungle. This
region also forms the headwaters of several rivers that flow to both the
Amazon and the Pacific, and a major spill on the OCP could contaminate
downstream communities on either side of the mountains. A less
controversial path would follow the SOTE pipeline all the way across the
Andes, but still impact local agricultural communities. The SOTE itself
has suffered 14 major spills in past three years-most recently in May,
when a landslide ruptured the pipeline near Papallacta, spilling 7,000
barrels.
The OCP Consortium, which is to build and operate the
pipeline, is financially backed by consortium members Deutsche Bank and
Citibank. Other members include Alberta Energy of Canada, Occidental
Petroleum, Agip of Italy and the US oil/uranium titan Kerr-McGee.
Soltani believes the plunder is fueled by the dynamics of
globalization. "Most of the revenues from auctioning off the rest of the
Ecuadorian Amazon are going to pay international creditors who basically
got Ecuador into the situation by allowing it to borrow more than it
could pay back because they had oil revenues to depend on," she says.
"The oil got Ecudaor into this mess." According to PetroEcuador, the
state oil company (whose monopoly has been pried open by IMF pressure),
of Ecuador's $2.4 billion in 2000 oil revenues, $1.3 billion went to
foreign debt payments, and $1 billion went to the bailout of failing
commercial banks, leaving less then $100 million for Ecuador's domestic
spending.
Soltani states that "export-oriented development
policy is unilaterally imposed by the international institutions like
the World Bank through their Country Assistance Strategy, or CAS. This
is basically a business plan by which the World Bank, IMF, IDB and other
international creditors decide how much money countries get to create a
favorable investment climate." She says the projected $2.4 billion
expansion of Ecuador's oil industry will mean "an immense amount of new
drilling and feeder pipes fueled by the new pipeline. Many of these
areas are claimed by tribes, and many of them have legal title to the
lands." "The bankruptcy of the banks followed IMF-mandated
privatization," says Soltani. "The IMF has Ecuador on a strict regime of
structural adjustment as a condition of the payback plan. Another
condition is dollarization of economy and the national development plan
which includes doubling of oil production-of which 80 percent would go
to pay the debt. They decided Ecuador had to have at least a billion in
new investment in order for the dollarization plan to work. There goes
the Amazon."
In January 2000, plans to phase out Ecuador's
national currency and replace it with the US dollar sparked a nationwide
coordinated uprising led by an unprecedented alliance of Ecuador's
highland indigenous peoples, labor unions and elements of the military.
The protests succeeded in bringing down President Jamil Mahuad, and only
the last-minute intervention of the military chief prevented an
Indian-led revolutionary junta from taking power. Instead, Mahuad's vice
president Noboa was installed in power. But Noboa went ahead with the
dollarization plan, and protesters again blocked roads nationwide and
occupied Quito, the capital, in January 2001.
The threat of
further unrest, in turn, fuels Ecuador's militarization. "Ecuador is
going the way of Colombia," Soltani warns. "There were three pipeline
bombings in Ecuador in the last year, and ten oil workers kidnapped and
one-an American-killed. This has mostly been in the border region near
Colombia, where the new pipeline is planned. Oil companies, including
Oxy, have asked for extra military commitments from the Ecuadorian
government, and are complicit in Ecuadorian government plans for
militarization of the border region." In August 2001, the Energy
Intelligence Group's Oil Daily reported: "In a bid to improve security
in areas bordering Colombia, Ecuador's oil companies-16 private
companies and state company PetroEcuador-and the country's armed forces
signed a framework agreement under which each company can arrange to pay
the military for protection." Citing the threat of guerilla infiltration
from across the Colombian border, the article concluded: "With
construction starting on a new, heavy crude oil pipeline, companies
operating in Ecuador are even more concerned about protecting their
investment."
Public hearings on the OCP in Quito have been
packed with indigenous, campesino and ecologist opponents of the
project, who charge that the environmental impact studies have been
inadequate. The National Confederation of Indigenous Peoples of Ecuador
(CONAIE), which led the January 2000 uprising, has joined with the
environmentalist Acci—n Ecol—gica, local farmers along the pipeline
route and the petroleum engineers union to try to stop the project
through the courts, charging failure to adequately assess environmental
risks or consult with affected communities. But the Ecuadorian courts
have failed to halt construction, even while some cases are still
pending.
On August 31, nine women activists from Acci—n
Ecol—gica were assaulted by company security guards when they attempted
a peaceful protest at the offices of the OCP Consortium in Quito. The
guards violently ejected the activists and two journalists, destroying
their cameras. One journalist, Gustavo Abad from the leading national
daily El Universo, was reportedly beaten and detained by OCP employees.
The sit-in was in support of a one-day general strike underway by
residents in the oil-producing region of Lago Agrio to protest the
construction of the new pipeline complex.
BRAZIL ADVANCES; RAINFOREST RETREATS
Nearly a thousand miles east of Ecuador's Oriente, in
the Urucu River region of Brazil's central Amazon Basin, a similar
pipeline scheme is also linked to an ambitious national development
strategy. President Fernando Cardoso's $45 billion Avanca
Brasil-"Advance Brazil"-plan includes a new gas and oil pipeline network
in the very geographic heart of the Amazon, linking Manaus, capital of
vast Amazonas state, to remote Porto Velho, through the isolated
territory of the Apurina, Paumari, Deni and Juma indigenous peoples.
None of these peoples have yet had their land demarcated, and therefore
have little legal recourse to stop the project. The first
165-mile leg of the project was completed in 1998, following Urucu River
from Coari to the new Urucu-Jurua Gas Field complex, which includes new
wells, feeder pipes, processing plants and transmission lines.
Investment is pouring in from the Houston-based El Paso Energy
International, a majority owner of two power plants served by the
pipelines. New gas-burning power stations are also planned, including
one at Porto Velho, the terminus of the expanded pipeline project. In
1997, the Japanese Export-Import Bank loaned $64 million for
construction of the Urucu Gas Processing Plant. Also involved are
GasPetro, a subsidiary of the state oil company PetroBras, and the
multinational oil infrastructure giant Halliburton.
The first
Coari-Urucu leg has already had disastrous impacts on local
populations-firstly, by blocking numerous creeks used as a water source
by indigenous and campesino communities. Fish populations have dropped
dramatically, and local manioc subsistence agriculture has suffered.
Many communities now have to bring in water remotely. Brazil nut and
fruit trees were also destroyed-in violation of Brazil's forestry
code-and compensation did not reach all affected communities. The
urban-to-rural population boom which followed the pipeline has turned
Coari, the jungle settlement midway between Manaus and Urucu, into the
region's prostitution center, and seen an attendant explosion of AIDS
and sexually transmitted diseases. The new settlers have also brought a
boom in illegal logging.
The next 200-mile leg, south from Urucu
to Porto Velho, will cut into what one biologist calls the "nucleus of
the Amazon"-which is believed to contain Brazil's highest concentrations
of oil and natural gas. The project is facing legal challenge by local
unions and non-governmental organizations, again charging inadequate
environmental review or compensation to affected communities. But the
Apurina and other indigenous peoples of the region fear the project will
result in the theft and degradation of much of their land before it can
be demarcated.
VENEZUELA-BRAZIL GRID INTEGRATION: JUST
THE FIRST STEP
Another ambitious mega-development plan
is the Venezuela-Brazil Transmission Line, connecting the Guri Dam on
the Caroni River in Venezuela's southern Bolivar state to Boa Vista, in
the northern Brazilian state of Roraima. This leg of the project was
completed in 2001, following years of resistance by affected indigenous
peoples on both sides of the border. A possible extension south to
Manaus is also planned, effectively merging the electrical grids of
Venezuela and Brazil. The Arawako, Pemon and other Indian
nations of La Gran Sabana, Bolivar state's highland plateau which
divides the Amazon and Orinoco basins, had repeatedly blockaded
construction roads through the region. But in 2000, the Bolivar
Indigenous Federation (FIB) and National Indigenous Council of Venezuela
(CONIVE) both signed off on the Transmission Line project-partially in
return for autonomy guarantees in the new constitution instated by
Venezuela's populist President Hugo Chavez. On the Brazilian side, the
Macuxi at the S‹o Marcos Indigenous Land reserve also cut a deal
allowing the power lines to cross their territory. In exchange for
dropping their opposition to the project, the Macuxi finally got
government action on their long-outstanding demands for eviction of
ranchers who had been encroaching upon their officially demarcated
homeland. Ironically, the August 2001 ceremony at the Brazil-Venezuela
border officially inaugurating the project was attended not only by
presidents Cardoso and Chavez, but also by Cuba's Fidel Castro, who was
in Venezuela on an official visit. The development scheme is likely to
meet new resistance, however. Ecologists are unhappy that the new
transmission line cuts through Venezuela's Canaima National Park. More
importantly, it is conceived as but a first step in a string of far more
ambitious projects with immeasurable impacts. The hydro-power of the
Guri Dam is to be augmented by a series of new dams on the Caroni, a
major Orinoco tributary. The Caura-Paragua Project would actually
divert Venezuela's Caura River across a mountain divide into the Paragua
River, so as to increase hydro-power output on the Caroni, into which
the Paragua drains. A new phase of mineral development is also
projected, with a Guri-Manaus gas pipeline to follow the transmission
lines. The Canadian company Placer Dome has plans to develop a gold mine
at Las Cristinas in La Gran Sabana. Manaus, already the crossroads of
the Amazon, is to be linked with both oceans and numerous commodity
ports. Connected with the Orinoco and Venezuelan ports via the
transmission lines and gas ducts, it will also link to remote Porto
Velho via the Urucu project. Porto Velho, in turn, is to be linked to
Lima, Peru, through a new road, BR-364, cutting through Serra do Divisor
National Park near the Brazil-Peru border-and the territories of the
Poyanawa, Kaxinawa, Katukina, Shanenawa and Kulina peoples. A more
southerly road route, dubbed the Inter-Oceanic Transport Corridor, would
link Bolivia's Santa Cruz gas fields to the Chilean port of Arica. The
Santa Cruz gas fields, deep in the Bolivian Amazon, are also slated to
be linked to Porto Alegre on Brazil's Atlantic coast via the new
Bolivia-Brazil Natural Gas Pipeline. Japan has pledged $1.5 million for
a feasibility study for the pipeline. These projects are explicitly
linked to the expansion of the FTAA to South America, beginning with the
Southern Cone nation of Chile. According to a recent IDB report, the
agency is seeking to "identify corridors that would facilitate linkage
and promotion of trade within the Southern Cone between the Atlantic and
Pacific basins."
HYDRO HUBRIS
The most
ambitious mega-projects of all call for harnessing the Amazon Basin's
waterways as arteries for global trade. Giant hydro-electric dams on the
Amazon and Orinoco basin rivers already fuel industrial development
across the South American continent. The next envisioned phase calls for
enlarging these rivers into a an interlocking network of inland shipping
lanes, each on the scale of the St. Lawrence Seaway. The
Brazilian government has drawn up plans for a Tocantins-Araguaia
Waterway, which would dredge these two Amazon tributaries, turning them
into industrial waterways, with several new shipping terminals along the
way to facilitate export of timber and other resources from the
conquered rainforest. The project would entail building locks at the
Tucurui and Santa Isabel dams. The Xavante Indians, whose lands would be
affected, are opposed, as are the Ava-Canoeira people, much of whose
homeland would be flooded by the Serra de Mesa dam on the Tocantins
River, now nearing completion.
The related Madeira-Amazon
waterway would connect Porto Velho to the Amazon River at Manaus,
running through the lands of the Mura, Munduruku and Parintintim
peoples. First proposed by local ranchers and cotton producers carving
new agricultural empires out of the destroyed Amazon, this plan has also
won the support of Brazil's government.
In March 1997, the
Brazilian Movement of Dam-Affected People issued the Declaration of
Curitiba, calling for moratorium on all dam construction in the Amazon.
Some 30 new hydro-electric dams are currently pending in the Brazilian
Amazon, and increasingly they are financed by private capital. The Belo
Monte Dam on the Xingu River would flood much of the traditional land of
the Kayapo people. Due to the opposition of the Kayapo and their allies,
the initial 1,200 hectares slated to be flooded-including much of the
Kayapo's demarcated reserve-has been reduced to 400 hectares. This would
avoid the flooding of villages, but still mean relocation of some 2,000
families living outside the centralized Kayapo villages. Construction is
foreseen for 2002. Opponents of the plan still face threats and actual
violence from the private thugs of local economic interests who hope to
profit from the development. On August 25, 2001, Ademir Alseu Federicci
of the Movement for Development of the Trans-Amazon and the Xingu (MDTX)
was shot to death in his own home in Altamira, near the dam site.
According to a statement by his supporters: "It is believed that the
crime had a political motivation as Dema, as he was called, was a
principal leader in Altamira in the fight against large landowners,
loggers and dams."
The Canadian utility Hydro-Quebec now has an
advisory contract for the Hidrovia project, a plan being promoted by
several South American governments to link the new industrial waterways
of the Amazon Basin with the Parana River to the south. The Hidrovia
would drain the vast wetlands of southern Amazonia to turn the Parana
into a major artery for ocean-going freighters. Stretching from the
remote Amazonian wetlands of Brazil, Bolivia and Paraguay to the
metropolitan ports of Buenos Aires and Montevideo, the Hidrovia would
facilitate the industrial super-exploitation of Amazonia and South
America's continental interior in the 21st century. Opposition is led by
the Guarani Indians of southern Brazil and northern Paraguay, who,
having already lost most of their traditional territories to cattle
interests, now stand to have their last landbase drained by the
Hidrovia.
While the dynamics behind the corporate
super-exploitation of the Amazon are complex and entrenched, they have
not been impervious to challenge by citizens of both the South American
exporting nations and the North American consuming nations. Texaco, a
leader in Ecuador's oil industry in the 1980s, pulled out of Oriente
when its contract ended in 1992 following Judith Kimerling's expose of
Amazon Crude.
"We have to take responsibility for the footprint
of these globalization projects in places like the Amazon," says Atossa
Soltani. "Much of the destruction is driven by our energy consumption
patterns. The oil and gas exports from the Amazon mostly go to the US.
Over 20 percent of US oil imports last year came from Venezuela, Ecuador
and Colombia. Venezuela has overtaken Saudi Arabia as our top source of
foreign oil. We have to demand an end to drilling and exploration in
frontiers and culturally sensitive regions, and demand that the World
Bank stop funding this development. The ultimate challenge is to reduce
our dependence on oil-because from the Arctic to the Amazon, it is our
appetite for oil that drives the destruction of some of the last wild
places, and the indigenous peoples that live there." That challenge is
certain to be greater than ever, thanks to the September 11 carnage, and
the new hemispheric war footing it has sparked. ###