Probe Alert Probe International Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Dear Friend, A tragedy is unfolding in Belize’s breathtaking Macal River valley, until recently one of the most unspoiled places remaining in this hemisphere. The tragedy that is overtaking this tropical Central American rainforest is utterly needless and, with your help, we can stop further damage. As you are reading this letter, pollution is spewing down the river from a Canadian-owned Chalillo dam. The owner of the dam, Fortis, a multinational corporation based in Newfoundland and listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, refuses to accept responsibility for the massive sediment discharges, blaming the orange-brown contaminants on activities upstream of the dam. This claim is preposterous, as you can see in these photographs from our colleagues at the Belize Institute of Environmental Law and Policy. It shows clear water wending its way down the Macal River to the dam. Immediately downstream of the dam, the water becomes orange and polluted. Fortis has good reason to be in denial over this dam. Throughout its 11-year history, critics have warned that the dam was a boondoggle that would not perform as predicted. To our sorrow, the critics – the Belize Alliance of Conservation Non-Government Organizations and Probe International among them – were all too correct. As a result, this uneconomic dam is now doing great damage to the environment and to communities along the riverbank. Because the dam flooded their pristine habitat, the survival of the Scarlet Macaw, the jaguar and other species of singular beauty are now at grave risk. Because the contaminated water downstream causes skin rashes and is no longer fit for drinking, the downstream communities – too poor to truck in water – are now forced to rely on rainwater. Because the turbid water is hurting local fishers as well as Belize’s unparalleled niche eco-tourism, many Belizeans have also lost a source of food and their livelihood. With the polluted water now having reached the Caribbean, the damage to the environment may become greater still, with the country’s barrier reef at risk. We have written to Stanley Marshall, President of Fortis, asking him to stop the pollution, to compensate the downriver communities, and to come clean on its activities to the citizens of Belize and to its shareholders in Canada. We know that Dr. Guy Lanza, professor of microbiology at the University of Massachusetts, has also written to the responsible Belizean officials in the Department of Health, the Department of Environment, and the Public Utility Commission to demand an end to the pollution, saying that it “poses immediate risks to human health, livestock health, and the ecology of the Macal, Mopan, and Belize rivers.” To date, Mr. Marshall has refused to respond. Likewise, he has not responded to our colleagues in Belize, who are also pressing the Belizean government to enforce the environmental regulations that the dam is violating. We need your help to make Mr. Marshall and Fortis accountable to the people of Belize and to stakeholders in Canada. Please write to him at the address below to demand that he stop the pollution from flowing downstream and find an ecologically sound solution to deal with the sediment. And please help us to keep the pressure on Fortis to follow Belize’s environmental laws, by supporting our work with a tax-creditable, charitable donation. Fortis needs to know that Canadians are watching. With your help, Fortis will know it, and will be pressed to take action! Sincerely, Patricia Adams Please send a letter expressing your concerns to: Mr. Stanley Marshall The Sorry History of the Chalillo dam in Belize • The campaign to stop the Chalillo dam begins in 1999. |
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