News stories by Mario Osava * - Tierramérica
Belo Monte Dam Hit by Friendly Fire
- Inter Press Service

Those who made the final decision on the design of Brazil’s Belo Monte hydroelectric dam will face legal action in the future for the damages caused. This is the kind of warning one would expect from environmentalists, but in this case it comes from a surprising quarter: staunch supporters of hydropower.
Green Economy Seeks to Maintain Growth Threatened by Disasters
- Inter Press Service

There is every indication that major disasters could be the new midwives of history. Seeking to prevent them, the green economy aims to reduce 'environmental risks' and 'ecological scarcities' while improving human well-being and social equity.
Global Warming Threatens Future of Amazon Turtles
- Inter Press Service

The more data she gathered for her Master’s thesis, the more alarmed the young Brazilian biologist became. The Amazon turtles born in the dozens of nests examined in 2008 and 2010 were all female. And only eight percent of the hatchlings studied in 2007 had been male.
Brazil Cannot Swim Against the Climate Current
- Inter Press Service

With no meaningful proposals, and in the face of internal setbacks and an adverse international context, Brazil is largely unprepared to assume the leadership role expected of an environmental power at the Durban climate change conference.
Belo Monte Dam and Hunters Endanger Amazon Turtles
- Inter Press Service

Luiz Cardoso da Costa was horrified as he watched the Amazonian manatee, a large docile beast, bleeding out from the knife wound he had dealt it, yet greedily gulping down grasses as if eating could somehow stave off death.
BRAZIL: Shark Attacks Attest to Environmental Sins of Suape Port
- Inter Press Service

The Suape port complex may be eternally absolved of its environmental sins for ushering in unprecedented prosperity in the impoverished northeastern Brazilian state of Pernambuco, and for having been built before stricter requirements were introduced.
BRAZIL: Amazon Dams Mean Progress for Some, Lost Livelihoods for Others
- Inter Press Service

The Amazonian town of Mutum-Paraná, in the northern Brazilian state of Rondônia, is disappearing. Its last remaining buildings must be dismantled before it is flooded by the construction of the Jirau hydroelectric dam on the Madeira River.

