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April 24, 2006 - 24 de Abril del 2006 - ENS

PETROBRAS ABANDONS PLAN TO BUILD ROAD INTO YASUNÍ NATIONAL PARK

 
ENS - Environmental News Service

Petrobras Abandons Plan to Build Road Into Ecuadorian Amazon Park (Yasuní National Park)

4/24/2006

WASHINGTON, DC, April 24, 2006 (ENS) - The Brazilian national oil company Petrobras has relinquished plans to build a new access road into Yasuni National Park, located in the megadiverse Ecuadorian Amazon. The company has not given up on oil development within the park, but now says it will employ helicopters to access the site.

For nearly two years, Ecuadorian and international conservation, indigenous, and scientific groups have been fighting to stop the road into the park, which is a designated UNESCO Biosphere and is currently roadless. They fear a road would allow land development of all kinds to penetrate the pristine rainforest that shelters a rich diversity of species as well as indigenous peoples who prefer to avoid contact and retain traditional ways.

In a written statement last week from Petrobras to Save America’s Forests, a conservation group based in Washington, DC, the company explained that it will follow the advice of the Ecuadorian government not to build the road.

“The new operation will be based on helicopter transportation inside Yasuní National Park, therefore, it eliminates the access road inside the park,” explained the Petrobras statement. “It includes recommendations of both the Environment and Energy Ministries and the suggestions of other organizations of civil society, which had contributed to its improvement.”

“This is a huge step in the right direction,” said ecologist Dr. Matt Finer of Save America’s Forests. “The two most potentially damaging components of the project - the road and the processing facility - have been taken out of the park and Huaorani territory.” The Huaorani are an independent indigenous tribe of the Ecuadorian Amazon.

“Given the proliferation of oil concessions throughout the Amazon, hopefully this will set a critical precedent," said Finer. "No new oil access roads through primary rainforest.”

“We applaud the Ecuadorian government’s decision to insist on roadless oil development in Yasuni,” said Leda Huta of Finding Species, based in Takoma Park, Maryland. “Yasuni is one of the most important national parks in the world and this road would have opened up one of the most intact sections of the park."

This outcome seemed unlikely in May 2005, when Petrobras began constructing the road through primary forest in the northern buffer zone of the park. By June, the road had reached the northern boundary of Yasuni, and Petrobras requested permission from the Environment Ministry to continue road construction into the park.

But the turning point had come just a month earlier, in April, when the Ecuadorian Congress, responding to widespread street protests, ousted Lucio Gutierrez from the presidency. The Gutierrez administration had granted Petrobras the environmental license for the project in August 2004.

The incoming administration of Alfredo Palacio, and in particular the new Environment Minister Anita Alban, were more sympathetic to the concerns of conservationists and scientists that a new road into the intact northeast section of Yasuni would be devastating.

A report prepared by a group of 50 park scientists in November 2004 concluded that Yasuni was one of the most biodiverse rainforests on Earth, and that new oil access roads would pose the greatest threat to that biodiversity.

The report advocated roadless oil development, a position also supported by the Smithsonian Institution based in the United States as well as and Ecuadorian nongovernmental organizations.

On July 7, 2005, Alban wrote a letter to the Petrobras President and CEO José Sergio Gabrielli de Azevedo denying the company authorization to enter the park and continue road construction.

The Huaorani demanded the moratorium last summer when 150 Huaorani marched through the streets of the capital, Quito, to protest widespread oil extraction in their territory. Huaorani leaders presented their plan for a moratorium to Congress and high-ranking officials in the Palacio administration.

“The Huaorani have made it clear they oppose new oil activities,” said Brian Keane of the indigenous rights group Land is Life, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “They complain of widespread illnesses due to contamination and fear for the survival of their brother clans living in voluntary isolation," Keane said.

"Allowing Petrobras to drill in Yasuni would be a gross violation of the rights of the Huaorani and Taromenane peoples. In fact, it would most likely be the end for the Taromenane," he said. The small group of Taromenane still live by choice as one of the world's most isolated tribes.

Conservationists are concerned that Ecuador is still permitting oil extraction to take place within a national park. Other Amazonian countries such as Brazil and Peru prohibit such activities within parks. Finer says Yasuni is the only national park in this incredibly biodiverse region, thus there is added urgency to fully protect it.

In addition, conservationists worry that the petroleum processing facility is planned for construction just two kilometers (1.24 miles) from the park boundary in a primary rainforest environment.

Nonetheless, says Finer, given the "extremely difficult task" of persuading an oil giant such as Petrobras to make costly adjustments to minimize environmental damage in an oil dependent country such as Ecuador, many people in the environmental community consider Petrobras' decision to stop the road a major victory, especially in view of the fact that the road is constructed right up to the boundary line of Yasuni National Park.

Huta of Finding Species says, “That’s snatching victory from the jaws of defeat."

Yasuni National Park encompasses a large stretch of the world’s most diverse tree community, has the highest documented insect diversity in the world, and has many diverse species of mammals, birds, amphibians, and plants.

Eight species of monkeys live in Yasuni along with the golden-mantle tamarin, the giant otter and two other otter species, endangered tapirs, deer and anteaters, peccaries and sloths, racoons, armadillos, and in the rivers, pink dolphins and dwarf dolphins.

Harpy eagles and king vultures soar above the canopy, while scarlet macaws as well as blue and yellow macaws feast on clay licks. Well known cats such as jaguars and ocelots inhabit the Yasuni rainforest, which they share with lesser known species such as the jaguarundi and the oncilla.

see ENS article with pictures
http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/apr2006/2006-04-24-02.asp

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