Most "run-of-river" hydroelectric dams in the Amazon Basin are used to divert all of the flow away from the natural river channel to generate electricity in a powerhouse located downstream. Such dams disrupt ecological connectivity and eliminate any flow-
Source: mongabay.com
High in the Andes Mountains, countless minor streams begin their pilgrimage downward, joining forces with the rain to form the tributaries of the Amazon River. The sediments and organic matter they carry with them on their journey seaward are the nutrient-rich lifeblood that nurtures and sustains the vast aquatic and terrestrial web of life in the Amazon Basin.
High in the Andes Mountains, countless minor streams begin their pilgrimage downward, joining forces with the rain to form the tributaries of the Amazon River. The sediments and organic matter they carry with them on their journey seaward are the nutrient-rich lifeblood that nurtures and sustains the vast aquatic and terrestrial web of life in the Amazon Basin.
This powerful downward flow of energy is increasingly being dammed to generate hydropower. Although the exact number of planned projects is in flux, 151 dams had been proposed for 5 of the 6 major Andean tributaries to the Amazon as of 2014 – a number that is bound to grow.
Unfortunately, poorly planned hydroelectric projects can open a Pandora's box of environmental problems, including disruptions to free-flowing river connectivity, loss of biodiversity, deforestation, and fragmentation of ecosystems.
The seriousness of those hazards has not been thoroughly researched, but scientists interviewed by a mongabay.com team have expressed strong views regarding the dangers surrounding the proliferation of Andean-Amazon dams.
"I'm concerned about the fact that there are so many dams being proposed and constructed on Andean-Amazon rivers," Dr. Elizabeth Anderson, of Florida International University and the Global Water for Sustainability (GLOWS) program told mongabay.com.
"There have been dams in this region for many years – one example is the HidroAgoyan Dam in Ecuador which fragmented the Pastaza River, and has been in place for decades. So the fact that dams are being built is not new. What's different about the current scenario is the sheer number of new projects, and the fact that many are quite large in size – larger than existing projects – and therefore are likely to have considerable ecological and social impacts."
Roads to ruin
The first is the worst. New roads open up territories for development. Photo credit: Rhett Butler.
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One of the biggest immediate environmental impacts will arise not from the proliferation of hydroelectric dams themselves, but from the road networks and electrical transmission lines that must be built to support dam construction and operation.
More than 80 percent of the proposed Andean Amazon dams will likely drive major deforestation due to new roads and flooding, according to a 2012 paper by Finer and Jenkins published in PLOS ONE.
"It is important to understand that a new hydroelectric project is more than just a dam structure," explained Ecuadorian Rivers Institute Executive Director Matt Terry. "The development of new roads, gravel mines, logging [operations], work camps, and power transmission lines may cause additional environmental impacts, as well as the segregation and fragmentation of ecosystems and habitats. Later, these new accesses may become a driving factor for additional development and new settlement and intervention which amplifies the initial impacts to ecosystems."
Dr. William Laurance of James Cook University supports that assessment: "There are over 150 large dams with greater than 2 megawatt capacity that are either planned or are under construction right now in the foothills of the Andes. There are 12 dams that are currently planned for the Tapajos River [Basin in Brazil] and it has been estimated that those 12 dams, because of the road networks, are going to result in almost 1 million hectares [3,861 square miles] of additional deforestation above and beyond the deforestation that would already happen. So, it is the opening up of these frontier areas that is the real problem."
Shattering ecological connectivity
Finer and Jenkins 2012: Existing and planned Hydroelectric dams of the Andean Amazon. Dams sorted by status (existing and planned) and size (2–99 MW, 100–999 MW, and ≥1,000 MW capacity). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0035126.g001 Map Credit: Finer and Jenkins / PLOS One.. Click image to enlarge.
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The Amazon River and its basin are intimately linked to the Andes Mountains. Placing 151 dams on major tributaries will create the first major break in that connectivity in 10 million years – with largely unknown ecological consequences.
Each of the Andean Amazon tributaries is a unique system with unique diversity patterns. However, those rivers are part of a bigger, more complex pattern of ecosystem functioning. "Losing or damaging the connectivity between these systems and the main stem of the Amazon is like cutting veins or creating clots in a circulatory system," Jorge Celi told mongabay.com. Celi evaluates environmental impact assessments and Biodiversity Offsets for the Wildlife Conservation Society, and he has been studying the Napo River, a major Amazon tributary, since 2007.
"Massive dam proliferation would dismember whole river systems and isolate biological populations with damaging and lasting impacts to the levels of diversity of the [Amazon] Basin, its functioning, and the services that it provides," Celi stated. "It could create cascading [impacts] that could affect the most diverse ecosystem on earth with consequences to the whole planet and humanity."
The Andes Amazon ¨white water streams¨ provide a broad range of ecological benefits. Numerous economically and ecologically important freshwater fish species migrate from the lowlands to the foothills to spawn.
The Andean tributaries also offer an annual supply of organic matter that supports the full range of tropical freshwater aquatic life throughout the Amazon Basin. The new dams, if built, will retain all of those sediments and nutrients and alter the flow of tributaries, with dire consequences for downstream productivity, floodplain sediment deposition, living organisms and people.
This Amazon river drainage flows freely from its source in the Andes. Photo credit: Ecuadorian Rivers Institute.
The endangered Giant River Otter (Pteroneura brasiliensis), which has already lost 80 percent of its range in the Amazon Basin, is at risk from dams that would further degrade its habitat and impact the fish species that it relies upon for food.
German herpetologist Claudia Koch recently discovered 14 species of reptiles and amphibians new to science in the Marañón River Valley of the Peruvian Andes in just 13 months of research. The Marañón is considered the main source of the Amazon. Koenig worries that those animals, along with many as yet unidentified endemic species, will be "lost forever" if proposed dams are built there.
Innumerable rare and endemic plant species make a home in and along the Andean tributaries, and require the specific microclimates created by natural flow regimes to survive. "The aquatic plant species, Myriocolea irrorata, for example, grows only in a specific section of the Topo River in the Pastaza watershed of Ecuador and is threatened with extinction by the development of a small, 27 megawatt, run-of-river hydroelectric project [the Topo hydroelectric project] which has broken perhaps the most important free-flowing, Andean Amazon connectivity in the Pastaza watershed," said Matt Terry.
Myriocolea irrorata, a liverwort endemic to the Topo River in the Pastaza watershed of Ecuador. Photo credit: Lou Jost.
Ecuadorian Rivers Institute." >
Free-flowing Andes Amazon rivers are vital to aquatic and terrestrial species, and to indigenous peoples. Photo credit: Ecuadorian Rivers Institute.
Unfortunately, there is currently no basin-wide authority to coordinate hydroelectric projects, though some are pressuring the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization (OTCA) to take on the task. Regardless, there is an urgent need for research, holistic planning, funding, policy mechanisms and incentives if the free-flowing health and vitality of the Andean Amazon tributaries are to be maintained.
"The Amazon dams are going to be a game changer for the Amazon, unfortunately," concluded William Laurance. "I think they are an environmental disaster wrapped in a catastrophe, the way that they are currently being developed and proposed. I am very, very concerned."
Most "run-of-river" hydroelectric dams in the Amazon Basin are used to divert all of the flow away from the natural river channel to generate electricity in a powerhouse located downstream. Such dams disrupt ecological connectivity and eliminate any flow-dependent uses in the affected section of river. Photo credit: Ecuadorian Rivers Institute.
Article by Liz Kimbrough with co-research by Anjali Kumar
© Mongabay / original article
Date : 04/06/2015