Friday, April 26, 2024

Energy & Fuel

Brazil: Social movements reject Belo Monte

0
60 non-governmental organisations have attacked the partial go-head given to the Belo Monte hydroelectric power station by IBAMA, the federal government’s environmental agency.

Ecuador: Seven Foreign Oil Companies to Pull Out

0
Some foreing oil companies want to leave Ecuador because of a law tham forces them to provide services instead of only make geberate profits from Ecuador's vast crude reserves.

Colombia: Indigenous protestors block roads in border region with Venezuela

0
We will be here until they free our people and the military stop falsely accusing us of links to the ELN’ says one striker.

Latin America: Carlos Mesa looks at political transition

0
In a talk at the London School of Economics (available as a podcast), former Bolivian President Carlos Mesa looks at political transitions in Latin America.

Brazil: Belo Monte dam ruling reversed

0
While the country was absorbed in the annual Carnival, construction work began on the controversial Belo Monte hydroelectric power station, after a higher court overruled an earlier judicial decision to halt the project on envrionmental and social grou

Gasolinazo Challenges Bolivia’s ‘Process of Change’

0
The author argues that the increase in the prices of fuel in Bolivia could put in jeopardy President Evo Morales' reforms.

Brazil: Protesting workers stop work on Amazon dam

0
On 17 March construction workers at the Jirau dam in the Amazon state of Rondonia set fire to buses and damaged housing. The riot, believed to have been caused by poor working conditions, has brought construction work to a halt. 

Cochabamba Still Thirsty

0
The author analyses the serious shortage of drinnking water in one of Bolivia's biggest cities.

Bolivia After the Storm

0
At the end of December, the first popular uprising in the region against a government of the left took place in Bolivia. It was caused by an excessive increase in the price of fuels.

Belo Monte: The dialogue that never happened

0
Bishop Erwin Kräutler, the president of CIMI (Indigenous Missionary Council) in Brazil, has published an "open letter" in which he attacks the government's decision to push ahead with the Belo Monte hydroelectric dam in the Amazon basin.

Stay in touch

4,160FansLike
3,692FollowersFollow
87SubscribersSubscribe