Hopes and fears of a regional energy hub
Hydro-powered
dreams
AT LESS
than 8,000MW, Peru’s total electricity-generation capacity is modest, barely
matching four modern nuclear power stations. But President Alan García’s
government reckons it could produce almost eight times as much power just by
harnessing the country’s Amazonian rivers, let alone using increasingly
plentiful supplies of natural gas, and wind and solar power. The government has
big ambitions to turn the country into a regional energy hub, exporting
electricity to Brazil and Chile. Some of these plans are starting to be put
into effect. And they look set to generate some equally big protests.
Last year
the government signed an agreement under which Peru will export up to 6,000MW
of electricity to Brazil, a plan that would involve mainly Brazilian companies
investing around $20 billion. After Mr García visited his Chilean counterpart,
Sebastián Piñera, last month, the two governments agreed to set up a joint
energy-study group. A transmission line connecting Peru and Ecuador was built a
few years ago, but has rarely been used because the two countries have been
unable to agree on a price for electricity.
Green
groups are mobilising against the proposed hydroelectric dams. Their first
target is a $4 billion, 2,000MW dam at Inambari, in Peru’s south-eastern jungle
(see map). This would flood around 400 square kilometres. The protests against
it are backed by the regional government. Another dam proposed by a Brazilian
consortium, at Paquitzapango, has been stalled by the energy ministry. Leaders
of the Ashánikas, an Amazonian tribe, complained that it would displace 10,000
people.
Related
topics
The
government’s plans centre on the Marañón river, which it calls Peru’s “energy
artery”, with the capacity to generate 10,000MW from six dams. But local people
along the river say they have not been consulted about the hydroelectric
schemes. That is par for the course of Mr García’s government, which tends to
approve mines and oil concessions and only start consulting afterwards.
Exporting
electricity to Chile, which grabbed a chunk of Peru’s territory after a
19th-century war, is also controversial. Nevertheless, the energy ministry
proposes to grant a concession to build a 1,500MW fossil-fuel power station
near the border. This would use natural gas from Peru’s big Camisea field. Work
is due to start this year on building a pipeline from Camisea to the border.
The government reckons it can sell electricity to mines in Chile’s northern
desert.
To
nationalist politicians, that smacks of powering the enemy. Officials respond
that linking up the two country’s electricity grids is part of South American
integration, a progressive goal to which even their opponents pay lip-service.
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