Belize dam awaits far-off ruling

By David Shukman

The UK's historic Privy Council is hearing a challenge to the
construction of the 50-metre-high Chalillo dam in Belize, in central
America. Our science correspondent has been to see the work in progress.


The work is well advanced
The long dirt road to Chalillo snaked up through the forests of the Maya
Mountains in Belize and the potholes gouged by the tropical rain were so
deep I wondered if our four-wheel-drive would make it.

Our first sight was a bleak encampment for the construction workers.

Row upon row of huts, surrounded by a sea of mud, house teams hired from
as far afield as China, Nepal and India.

As we waited to be escorted to the dam site itself, the Chinese workers
were preparing a feast to celebrate their New Year and their laughter
rose above the gentle sounds of table tennis.


Two of the project's senior engineers led us further into the mountains,
our cars eventually stopping on a sharp bend overlooking the deep valley
of the Macal River.

Far below lay pale scars of bare earth where the jungle had been
stripped to make way for access roads and assembly areas.

I hadn't realised how advanced the project was: heavy vehicles were in
place along with a massive rock-crusher and two storage towers for
cement.

Standing amid these giant works, it hardly seemed feasible that a panel
of British judges, sitting on the Privy Council, could actually bring
all this to a halt.


How it should look: Artist's impression of the dam (Image by Bacongo)
The dam's developers, the Belize Electricity Company, admit that the PR
battle has hurt them - who could match a protesting Cameron Diaz in a
canoe? - but they certainly believe that nothing will stop the project
from being completed.

The case turns on whether the environmental assessment was adequately
handled.

Campaigners argue that the rock at the dam site is sandstone not granite
as the developers once claimed and that a fault-line running right over
the site was conveniently removed from a key map.

The electricity company says its opponents latch on to the smallest
error and blow it out of proportion.


What will be lost? What will be gained?
Like so many projects of this kind, it's a question of balance between
encouraging development and minimising destruction.

Belize's image as an eco-friendly tourist destination may suffer if the
dam goes ahead. On the other hand, asks a senior electricity executive,
how will those tourists enjoy air-conditioning if we don't go ahead?

The dilemma is clear. The problem is the effects of the dam are likely
to be irreversible.

During my stay, I was cooled by an electrically powered fan but also
woke to a gentle orchestra of bird-song rising from the banks of a river
that may be changed for ever.