Celebrities: Bush, Don't Fund Peru Rainforest Ruin | Amazon Watch
Amazon Watch

Celebrities: Bush, Don’t Fund Peru Rainforest Ruin

September 4, 2003 | Jude Webber | Reuters

Lima, Peru – A group of show business stars urged President Bush on Thursday not to let U.S. tax dollars destined for a Peruvian energy project be used to fund the ruin of one of the planet’s most precious rainforests.
The letter, signed by Susan Sarandon, Chevy Chase, Ruben Blades, Kevin Bacon, Jessica Lange and rock star Sting, among others, turns up the heat on the Camisea gas project ahead of a key vote on a $75 million loan next week by the Inter-American Development Bank at which the U.S. position will be crucial.

The U.S. Export-Import Bank last week turned down backing for a $214 million loan for Camisea, Peru’s biggest energy project, over environmental concerns. If the IADB did the same, Camisea would be left short of cash and Peru would lack a key international seal of approval for the landmark project.

“We … are writing to urge you to take immediate steps to ensure that our tax dollars not contribute to the wholesale destruction of one of the planet’s most biodiverse and remote rainforests and to the demise of vulnerable indigenous populations,” said the letter, released by environmental groups Amazon Watch and Friends of the Earth.

Peru is counting on the $1.6 billion Camisea project, which is being developed by an Argentine-led consortium, to boost growth by nearly one percentage point and create 40,000 jobs.

It plans to extract gas from an Amazon field 750 miles south of Lima, an area home to some of the last uncontacted tribes and untouched rainforests on earth.
Two 500 mile pipelines, now 70 percent built, will cross the Andes to a plant on the fringes of the Paracas coastal nature reserve, a playground for sea lions and rare penguins and a major tourist attraction.

From there, one pipeline will run to Lima, supplying gas by August 2004, the government says.

‘DISASTER IN THE MAKING’
Peru says it has done everything by the book to minimize Camisea’s environmental impact, has held 18 public hearings and has studied 14 alternative sites for the Paracas plant.

Economy Minister Jaime Quijandria said talks were continuing with the IADB and “we think things are going well.”

But Bianca Jagger, rights campaigner and ex-wife of Rolling Stones star Mick Jagger, called Camisea “a disaster in the making” that would sully the IADB if it approved the loan.

“We have to hope that the voices of reason will be heard rather than the voices of ruthless oil and gas companies … all they want is profit,” she told Reuters. She has written to Peru’s President Alejandro Toledo urging a Camisea rethink.

“We understand that much of the gas extracted from Camisea is destined for electricity markets in California,” the letter said. “We feel sure that if the consumers in California knew about the high social and ecological costs of natural gas from the Peruvian Amazon, they would be highly opposed to it.”

Atossa Soltani, executive director of Amazon Watch, told Reuters from Washington that three of the four well sites were located inside the Nahua Kugapakori Indigenous Reserve, which was established by the government to protect the Nahua, Nanti and Kirineri tribes which live in voluntary isolation.

“Seventy percent of the Nahua died in the 1980s when the Nahua were contacted by Shell,” Soltani said. The Anglo-Dutch company, Royal Dutch/Shell, discovered Camisea in the early 1980s.

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