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“The mega projects proposed by the hydroelectric companies transgress regional policies…that have coalesced in a visionary goal: to make of Aysen a Reserve of Life.” – Chilean Patagonia Defense Council (coalition of 37 organizations)

“What hurts me as a Chilean is that they’ve given our waters away to transnationals in exchange for nothing. So what are we going to be able to leave for future generations? Today, the politicians say we’ll leave them electricity. But they don’t say the electricity is for the mining companies, not the people. It will turn out that we are slaves in our own lands.” - Renato Flores, President, Fishermen's Union of Puerto Gala.

 

Click here to print this page Stop Dams; Protect Patagonia's Rivers and Forests / Chile

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In the Aysen region of Chilean Patagonia, the people still drink pure water out of rivers that tumble from glaciers through pristine temperate rainforests and spill into scenic fjords. A plethora of mini-climates and ecosystems give Chile’s forests the highest biological diversity among the world’s temperate rainforests. Endemism (species that exist nowhere else on the planet) is also high. The huemul, an endemic deer that appears with the condor on the Chilean national shield, still survives in the Patagonian wilderness, though in most of Chile it is remembered only as a legend.

A “Reserve of Life”

Settled by fishermen, ranchers and farmers only during the last century, the Aysen region’s human population barely breaks 100,000. The long road south from Santiago stops abruptly, and wilderness stretches into the vast distance: spectacular mountains, ice fields, wild rivers and fjords. A coalition of local organizations has declared the Aysen region a “Reserve of Life,” and pledged to pursue development that is “just, sustainable and equitable.”

Their pledge is now being challenged by a different sort of coalition – a consortium of national and transnational corporations that wants to build at least 5 dams on Patagonia’s pristine Baker and Pascua rivers. Their purpose would be to deliver electricity from the dams to Santiago – 1,500 miles away – by building one of the world’s longest power lines.

A 1,500-Mile Power Line

The HidroAysen plan calls for clearing a 120-yard-wide swath of forest between the Aysen dams and Santiago, and erecting over 5,000 200-foot towers to support the power lines. The lines would pass through four national parks and as many as seven other protected areas. Some 35,000 acres of native forest could be destroyed. Forests affected by the dams alone provide critical habitat for over 100 protected and endangered animal and plant species.

Who Benefits?

Within Patagonia, opposition to HidroAysen comes not just from environmentalists, but also from the business sector that wants to Campaign Billboard: "Patagonia Without Dams"develop adventure and eco-tourism, the salmon industry, fishermen’s unions and some municipal governments. They decry the injustice of bearing the environmental and economic impacts of a project that would benefit industrialists far away to the north.

At the national level, opposition centers around Chile’s energy policy. Leading scientists point out that Chile is blessed with great potential for wind, tidal and geothermal energy. Now, they say, is the time for investment in these sustainable, renewable alternatives. The proposed Patagonia dams could supply Chile’s energy needs for 50 years at most, they say – and at irreparable and incalculable cost to the environment and local communities. Why not invest now in energy efficiency and renewable projects that can serve for hundreds of years?

Forests and Climate Change

With 2,600 miles of coastline, Chile is very vulnerable to the effects of global warming – one of many good reasons to protect its remaining forests. Worldwide, deforestation causes more carbon emissions than all the cars, planes and trains combined. When forests are cut down, the forest that was a carbon sink becomes a carbon source as carbon is released into the atmosphere over the next 10 to 30 years.

How We Can Help

Chilean organizations are asking international citizens to help them convince the powerful Chilean company, the Matte Group, to withdraw from the HidroAysen project and fulfill its promise to protect Chile’s forests instead of destroying them. Voice your opinion and write a letter to Sr. Eliodoro Matte, Chief Executive of The Matte Group. Other ways you can support this cause: alert your friends, become a member, make a donation, distribute action alerts in your community or host an event to increase awareness and encourage others to join Global Response and save Patagonia's wild rivers and forests.

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