James Cameron Returns to the Brazilian Amazon with Avatar Stars Sigourney Weaver and Joel David Moore to Shine Spotlight on the Destructive Belo Monte Dam | Amazon Watch
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James Cameron Returns to the Brazilian Amazon with Avatar Stars Sigourney Weaver and Joel David Moore to Shine Spotlight on the Destructive Belo Monte Dam

Visit Planned to Indigenous Communities Affected by Dam Project on April 13-14 Press Conference and Protest with Dam Affected People in Brasilia at 2 pm on April 12 in the Centro Cultural de Brasília. SGAN 601

April 12, 2010 | For Immediate Release


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Brasilia, Brazil – James Cameron, Director of Avatar returned to Brazil this week accompanied by Avatar stars Sigourney Weaver, Joel David Moore, and wife Suzy Amis Cameron to raise worldwide awareness about Brazilian indigenous communities’ battle to stop the massive Belo Monte Dam on the Xingu River in the Amazon rainforest.

The Brazilian Government is auctioning the Dam project on April 20th. As reported on the front page of Sunday’s New York Times, Mr. Cameron visited the lower Xingu River basin from March 28-30 and was asked by leaders from indigenous communities to help them fight the dam, which is expected to devastate their environment and way of life. Given the urgency, Mr. Cameron agreed to return to Brazil to support Brazilian civil society’s campaign to challenge the dam.
On April 12, Mr. Cameron and Avatar stars will travel to Brasilia to join demonstrations planned by Brazilian organizations including the Xingu Alive Forever Movement (Movimento Xingu Vivo Para Sempre and the Movement of Dam Affected Peoples). From April 13-14, Mr. Cameron and delegation will travel to Xingu River’s Big Bend (Volta Grande) region in Pará State to join a gathering of indigenous and local communities who are affected by the dam project.

If built, the dam would be third largest in the world and cost between US$12.3 to US$17.5 billion. The project would divert 80 percent of the flow of the Xingu River along a 100-km length of the river, drying the lifeline of tens of thousands who depend on the river for their survival. To build Belo Monte, more earth would have to be dug than was moved to build the Panama Canal and; the dam will flood a 500 square km of rainforest and a significant area of the City of Altamira.

The Brazilian Government approved Belo Monte’s environmental license despite widespread public opposition and serious questions on the dam’s economic, social, and environmental viability. Companies considering entering the project include Andrade Gutierrez, GDF Suez and US-based mining giant Alcoa.

Financially, Belo Monte is a risky project generating only 10 – 30 percent of its 11,000 Megawatts (MW) installed capacity during the dry season, and average only 4,462 MW annually. To make the project viable, additional costly dams would need to be built further upstream threatening a vast area of tropical rainforests and affecting many of the 24 indigenous groups along the Xingu River. See Cameron’s letter to President Lula urging for cancellation of project.
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