Defending Brazil’s 1 Million Dam Victims

Brazil’s Movement of Dam Victims (MAB), as the name itself expresses, is a social organization to defend the rights of people affected by dam construction.

Electrobrás, the Brazilian company in charge of administering Brazil’s electric system, calculates that over 34 thousand square kilometers – an area bigger than Belgium – have been flooded by dam construction in Brazil.


The total of people affected by dam construction in Brazil amounts to about a million individuals. They lived or worked in areas taken over by reservoirs.


Over 70 thousand people, for example, were affected by the construction of the hydroelectric plants of Tucuruí­, state of Pará; Itaparica, state of Bahia, and Itaipu, in Paraná, .


The fight against dams commenced in the decade of the ’70’s, when these projects were implanted in greater scale in Brazil.


The dams of Sobradinho and Itaparica (in Northeast Brazil), Itaipu, Machadinho and Ita (in the South), and Tucuruí­ (in the North) were constructed during this period.


There were mass protests oppósing the construction of these plants. In 1989, during the First National Meeting of Workers Affected by Dams, a survey was conducted of the experiences of these people.


At the end of the meeting the decision was made to create a national organization in defense of dam victims. The MAB was created in 1991.


Brazil is not the only country with organized representatives who oppose dam construction.


In 1997 the MAB held the First International Meeting of Dam Victims, with representatives from 20 countries.


At the end of the encounter, the participants got together to establish March 14 as the international date of the fight against dams.


Main combat zones:


Implantation of alternative energy sources (wind, solar)
Alternative proposals to dam construction
Popular participation in decisions regarding electric energy
Environmental preservation
Reform of the electric energy sector


ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Doesn’t Want to Be 30th in World Tourism Anymore

The Brazilian tourism industry may generate 210 to 250 thousand new jobs this year. ...

Brazil’s Computer for All Program Has Already Lent US$ 16 Million

To promote digital inclusion by facilitating computer purchases and reducing the price tag, the ...

Brazil Tells Egypt It’s Ready to Sign Trade Agreement

Mercosur and Egypt should sign the trade agreement that they are negotiating during a ...

Brazil’s Lula Hurt and Mad at Environment Minister’s Resignation

Brazilian President, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, compared this Wednesday, May 14, the decision ...

Brazil: Bahia’s Miracle Ribbon

Nowadays, the fita of Senhor do Bonfim comes in many colors and is tied ...

Brazilian Refrigeration Industry Warms Up to Foreign Market

The Brazilian refrigeration, air conditioning, ventilation and heating industry wants to expand its exports. ...

The Good Cause

An organization of poor black women, descendants of slaves, overcomes formidable obstacles—including the animosity ...

Brazil-EU Summit to Be Held in Rio, in December

Brazil and the European Union are going o promote their second joint summit on ...

Fidelity Opens Outsourcing Service for Banks in Brazil

Fidelity National Information Services, a global provider of technology services to financial institutions, announced ...

Zero Pollution Bus Starts to Run in Brazil Soon

With the objective of developing a cleaner solution for urban public transportation in Brazil, ...