THE HANDSTAND

 2ndWINTER2011 November-December


latin-American reports

MEXICO

Mexico's president has ordered an investigation into the helicopter crash that killed Francisco Blake Mora, the country's interior minister, and seven others on Friday.

Felipe Calderon said the helicopter was flying in fog when it went down in southeast Mexico City, but all possible causes were under investigation.

"Mexico has lost a great patriot ... and I lost a dear friend," Calderon said, describing Blake, his right hand man in security matters, "an exemplary Mexican, honest, hardworking, and loyal".

In the front lines of his country's bloody war against drug cartels, Blake, 45, is the second interior minister during Calderon's term as president to be killed in an aviation accident.

The helicopter left from a military base in Mexico City at 8:45am and 10 minutes later disappeared from radar, Dionisio Perez Jacome, the country's transportation secretary, announced late on Friday.

Television images showed the scattered wreckage of the helicopter on a hillside south of the capital.

Drug war

Jacome said the government had asked US and French aviation crash experts to help in the investigation.

Mexico is locked in a brutal conflict against drug cartels that has killed 45,000 people in the last five years and Blake Mora was a prominent member of Calderon's security team.

On November 4, 2008, Juan Camilo Mourino and several other people died when their small aircraft crashed next to a major Mexico City boulevard during rush hour.

Investigators concluded that Mourino's plane had been flying too close to a much bigger jet ahead of it, on the flight path to land at Mexico City airport, possibly causing a fatal wave of turbulence.

Blake took office in July 2010, the fourth man to serve as interior minister under Calderon.

The last tweet on Blake Mora's twitter account was on November 4, when he paid tribute to Mourino.

"Today we remember Juan Camilo Mourino three years after his passing, a human being who worked towards the realisation of a better Mexico," Blake said in the tweet.



http://www.aljazeera.com/
Chile

Chile to Move Ahead with HydroAysén Project

October 19, 2011

This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Sara Bruziches

Source: Dan Brewington

On October 6, 2011, a Chilean appeals court lifted a suspension order that will allow the construction of the HidroAysén hydropower project to proceed. The appeals court had ordered the suspension in June after a petition for an injunction was filed by the environmental organization Patagonia Sin Represas (Patagonia Without Dams).

HidroAysén is a USD 3.5 billion project that aims to build five dams on the Baker and Pascua River in Aysén, a pristine environment in the Patagonia region in southern Chile known for its glaciers and lakes. The joint venture includes Endesa (a Spanish company owned by the Italian state company Enel) and the Chilean company, Colbún. The project consists of the construction of two dams on the Baker River and three on the Pascua River, which the company claims, will generate 2,750 megawatts (about thirty five percent of Chile’s total energy needs). The energy would travel over a grid of three hundred kilometers of high-voltage power lines from Aysén to the north of the country, where the country’s major cities are located. At a cost of around USD 4 billion, the grid would affect thousands of public and private properties in nine regions of Chile.

Endesa owns eighty percent of the water rights in Chile; in fact eighty five percent of the country’s bodies of water (rivers and lakes) no longer belong to the government. In 1981, then-dictator Augusto Pinochet approved the Water Code law (Código de Aguas) which established that the nation’s water was not public property, but rather private property. The law essentially said that the Chile’s water was a commodity with a commercial value, like a house and as such, its owners were free to lease , use, or sell it.

Sebastián Piñera’s administration has supported the project because of the country’s need for greater amounts of energy at the lowest possible prices to support its economic growth. In fact, with its energy-intensive mining industry and heightened standard of living, some analysts suggest that Chile will need to triple its energy capacity in the next fifteen years. Chile has little oil or natural gas and imports ninety seven percent of its fossil fuels, thereby depending largely on hydropower electricity. Furthermore, in light of the recent earthquakes in both Japan and Chile, the nuclear energy option has been abandoned. The energy system in Chile is extremely fragile and, according to the government, the HidroAysén dam would be one of the safest energy source for the country.

Opponents argue that the dam would, in fact, flood fourteen thousand acres, eliminating whitewater rapids and waterfalls that attract ecotourism. Critics of the dam instead want the government to focus on improving energy efficiency and developing renewable sources. Chile currently gets less than five percent of its electricity from renewable sources, but the country has an untapped abundant renewable-energy potential from the sun in its northern deserts, wind all along the pacific coast, geothermal sites and biomass from agricultural areas. Local opponents of the dam project are supported by international personalities like Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the senior attorney for the U.S. Natural Resources Defense Council, who has appealed to President Piñera to call off the project.

During the last Enel shareholders’ meeting, that was held on April 29, three Chilean shareholders asked that the hydroelectric project be stopped in order to avoid an environment disaster in Aysén, but their pleas fell on deaf ears. In fact, the CEO of Enel, Fulvio Conti responded: ”The project has a minimal environment impact and it’s strategic for the Chilean future. Enel has no intention to give up the project.”

The environmental organizations are expected to continue their fight against the HidroAysén project, but realistically, only the Italian state, which holds thirty-two percent of Enel’s stock, could stop the project. The Chilean government seems to have no legal right to halt it, because according to the Código de Aguas, once the water rights are given to an individual or a private company, the state cannot intervene. and the owners of the water rights are only required to declare where and when they will use the water, and their intended purpose. The role of the government is little more than monitoring the projects that these companies carry out.