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Corporate Social Responsibility
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8.24.2007 - 08:26am ET
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International Coalition Demands Cancellation of Virginia-based AES Corporation Dams in Panama That Will Flood Villages and Drive Species Extinct
(CSRwire) SAN FRANCISCO - August 24, 2007 - The Center for Biological Diversity,
along with more than 50 indigenous and environmental groups representing
over a million people from around the world, has sent a letter to
Virginia-based AES Corporation demanding it withdraw from three
controversial hydroelectric projects that are threatening La Amistad
International Park in Panama, dependent wildlife, and local communities
slated to be displaced by flooding.
La Amistad International Park, designated a World Heritage site by the
United Nations, forms part of the La Amistad Biosphere Reserve, one of the
most biologically diverse areas on the planet. It is home to at least 40
species of fish , 250 species of reptiles and amphibians, 215 species of
mammals, and 600 species of birds, including the resplendent quetzal and
the harpy eagle.
La Amistad stretches from the Talamanca mountain range, from which rivers
such as the Changuinola and its major tributary the Teribe flow through
the largest intact tropical rainforest left in Central America into
indigenous Naso and Ngobe territory, emptying into the Changuinola estuary
and the Caribbean Sea. Both the rivers and the estuary harbor important
fishery resources utilized by indigenous and non-indigenous Panamanians.
AES Corporation, based in Arlington, Virginia, has been financing three
proposed dam projects on the Changuinola River, located on the border of
the park, and its subsidiary in Panama, AES Changuinola, S.A., would
operate the three dams. A fourth dam would be operated by Hidroecologica
del Teribe, S.A., a subsidiary of the Colombian-owned Empresas Publicas de
Medellin, on the Bonyic River, a tributary of the Rio Teribe.
Stream monitoring studies have shown that the construction of even one of
the dams would be catastrophic for aquatic biodiversity. Many of the fish
and all shrimp species living in these rivers must migrate between the
ocean and freshwater to complete their life cycles; the dams would block
their migration and effectively extirpate up to 11 aquatic species from
the Biosphere Reserve. Such a loss would likely have devastating and
cascading consequences for indigenous culture and livelihoods and for
biodiversity throughout the area. (Click
here to read a "technical paper" detailing the potential
consequences.)
Thousands of Ngobe people stand to have their villages flooded, and will
be forced to relocate. The Center has been working with indigenous leaders
from both the Naso and Ngobe communities and with other environmental
groups to send a strong message to AES Corporation, its partners,
shareholders, and the Panamanian National Environmental Authority. The
dams are widely opposed by the people living near the construction sites
as well as by public-interest groups around the world. Three letters were
sent to AES Corporation, including one
endorsed by over 50 non-governmental organizations, one explaining a recent
violation of indigenous Ngobe rights relating to the dams, and one
from the Ngobe imploring the corporation and its shareholders to cancel
the dam projects. In their letter, the Ngobe ask AES: "Will you facilitate
the elimination of our lifestyles... Will you allow the flooding of our
homes and families?" The letter was signed by 144 people, representing
many from the villages which would be flooded.
Over the past several years, and particularly in recent months, AES
Corporation has had negative publicity relating to its global operations.
The corporation is a self described "global power company" that operates
in 28 countries. It has faced
lawsuits in the Dominican Republic for alleged dumping of rock-ash on
beaches there, and eventually pulled out of the
controversial Bujagali dam project in Uganda for issues similar to
those in Panama. Protests were held in July 2007
in El Salvador when more than 5,000 people marched in opposition to a
proposed electric plant in that country. The Center for Biological
Diversity and its associates, through these letters, are urging AES to
live up to its "commitment to be environmentally responsible."
Controversy has persuaded other financiers to move away from the Panama
dam projects. In 2005, the Inter-American Development Bank pulled its
funding of the Bonyic Hydroelectric project following environmental and
social concerns raised by the indigenous Naso community and environmental
groups.
Said Peter Galvin, conservation director at the Center for Biological
Diversity, "We are hoping to demonstrate to AES and its partners that the
international community supports local efforts to preserve indigenous
livelihoods and the extraordinary biodiversity of the La Amistad Biosphere
Reserve. We urge AES to follow the Inter-American Development Bank's
example and pull out."
Furthermore, recent studies have begun to demonstrate that while
hydroelectric projects are often promoted as "clean" and "green" energy
sources, the resulting impounded reservoirs above the dams are likely to
be large contributors of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Thus,
hydroelectric dams may actually increase global warming.
The threats to the La Amistad Biosphere Reserve are serious and immediate.
Only by raising the level of international awareness and commitment to
protect biodiversity and to help indigenous people ensure their future can
this extraordinary Biosphere Reserve be preserved.
For more information on the Center for Biological Diversity's work in
Panama, click
here.
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