SALTO GRANDE: ITAIPU'S BIG NEIGHBOR

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CIA-RDP08C01297R000800080001-7
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RIFPUB
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K
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2
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December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 23, 2012
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1
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Publication Date: 
November 14, 1980
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OPEN SOURCE
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Brazil's Oldest, English Language Daily Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/10/23: CIA-RDP08001297R000800080001-7 >Iiri 11E-SOLD SEFrARATELY ? NAO VPOIE SEA vENDIDO-STM4DAIVIENT5 Dfs&thuiedTIiBrazilbyjhe Latinlmerica Daff37 IYOA t6\rs -Lkr; Ut/Kg_ r?nr- VOL. 35 ? N.? 239 RIO DE JANEIRO/SAO PAULO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1989 Salto Grande: Itaipu's Big Neighbor '* By Ruben I. de Iloyos From the Americas - WASHINGTON, D.C. -- When I visited the pyramids of Egypt for the first time, they were already built. When I visited Persepolis for the first time, it had, of course, already been destroyed. But when I returned to the site of the Salto Grande Dam after a relatively short absence, it was being built. What I saw appeared to me to be magic. I had already been there, at the same place, when there was no one but myself and the vast Uruguay River, broad, sliding away like some great boa constrictor with muddy flanks toward the Atlantic, Miles downstream to the south, carrying away unused the , hydroelectric energy whose har- nessing, someday, had been discussed for almost a century. Today, at the rate of one every three months, the fourteen hydroelectric turbines that will produce 1,890,000 kilowatts around 1981 are being installed. Yesterday there was nothing, or almost nothing, beyond plans. Today, from one bank to the other, a wall of concrete a hundred feet high rises above the bed of the river, almost half a mile wide where the two powerhouses are implanted, reinforced by two enormous embankments whose face totals almost a mile and a half, to create a new artificial lake of 5 billion cubic yards of water. It all seems to have been done by magic. But it wasn't. It was simply hard work. Four thousand engineers, technicians, and construction workers from Argentina and Uruguay, who had been there since April 1, 1974, worked three shifts, day and night, in the light of the sun and in the glare of the floodlights, getting ready to bring the first turbine on stream in July 1979, exactly on schedule. That was the first time work stopped in 1,905 days of uninterrupted effort. Joint Project The Salto Grande hydroelectric darn is a joint project of Argentina , and Uruguay on the Uruguay ? River, The .planning) began in 1$90, In the first Stage, the efforts " individual visionaries' 'either were not" understood or were.. ignored by the interests and ideas of the time. Next, it was taken up by engineers like the Uruguayan Juan T. Smith (1907) and the Argentines Humherto Gamberale and Francisco A. Mermoz (1920- 1928), - But it was not until 1938 that the project received serious con- sideration, On January 13, 1938, the joint Argentine-Uruguayan Salto Grande Mixed Technical Commission (CTM) was established, which today is still carrying on the work of the first proponents. Like them, it is sometimes ignored, sometimes forgotten for years, subject to national, regional, or international pressures. It was during the second stage that vigorous efforts were made to create the legal and ( technical structure for the future dam. ,The Fundamental Act of 1938 was followed in 1946 by the Agreement and the Additional, Protocol (30 December); which was finally ratified by the Uruguayan, Government on August 13, 1958. (Argentina had already done so in 1948.) Around 1960, studies showed that Salto Grande was technically feasible and financially viable. Furthermore the legal and ad- ministrative instrument for bringing it into being, the Mixed' Technical Commission, had already been established. i The ' design of the final plans began to: 1take shape, but they were to need ._ almost thirteen more years before 4,000 engineers, technicians, and construction workers, here day and night since April 1, 1974. AREA SERVE? Corpus Dam, to provide 5 million, Argentines and Uruguayans are putting the finishing touches on the first regional dam -- the Salto Grande ? a model for the in- fegration of the River Plate Basin. Although Salto Grande actually remodels the local topography, the major concern of the CTM authorities from the outset was to maintain and improve the ecological balance. It was therefore not surprising that in 1978 the UN Environmental Protection Program declared Salto Grande "a world model of ecologidal preservation." Each historical age appears to channel its collective efforts in different ways and for different purposes. The Chinese built the Great Wall, in part out of fear of the invader. Egypt's pyramids, like ?????? POWER LINES so many monuments of the past, were built by slaves to corn- Map by Fain& memorate the dead among the ' living. Persepolis, like many The Salto Grande hydroelectric dam is a joint project , of Argentina and Uruguay. The planning began in 1980. It wil be completed ? finally --- by 1981, producing 1,890,000 kilowatts of power. they were complete. In 1973 the final engineering plan was ready, that of Charles T. Main and Associates. In addition, by coincidence, 1973 was the year in which the fossil energy structure of the world was shaken. Hydroelectric plants ceased to be merely possible and advisable. Salto Grande became in- dispensable. Since work began, Salto Grande has become a technical training school where hundreds of, Argentines and Uruguayans have enriched their knowledge through the transfer of technologies brought by international con- tractors selected by stringent competition from among the best in the World. (In due course they will be able to apply that knowledge to new projects now under study.), The management of the CTM has bat UP, an excellent - work team with Uniquesharacteristics. To walk through. the works is to fake 'd trip around the World: the enormous' cranes? perchFd like gigantic praying mantises on the crest of the dam come from Wagner Biro (Austria); an Italian- Argentine-Uruguayan consortium (Impregilo- Sollazot Impresit Sideco-Alvaro Palenga) has done the civil engineering; the electrical equipment (Kaplan turbines and generators) is being constructed and installed by V the Soviets (Energomachexport); tran- sformers, by Mitsubishi (Japan); and on and on. Charles Main from Boston, and Associates, from Argentina and Uruguay,- are responsible for, checking the quality of the construction work. Almost V a dozen countri,es are. involved in it. enormous amount of working capital. Since the first turbine came on stream in late 1979, hundreds of millions of dollars have already been received from sales of electrical power. The decision taken in 1973 to build Salto Grande fills the two nations with pride. For decades, international credit instutions had denied the loan because petroleum was cheap and appeared inexhaustible, and hydroelectric energy was, im- mediately at least, more costly. The 1973 oil embargo, which changed the structure of the economic and political world in more ways than one, had for the ' two neighboring nations of the River Plate the unsuspected merit of accelerating regional integration around a common resource: water, I provided: Water to supply communnie and satisfy their- domestid an industrial needs.. ? Water to irrigate five huticire new cultivable square miles. 40 Water power to generate, almost 2 million, kilowatts of electricity. . ? Water to improve navigation, conditions for vessels with drafts of i-up to eight feet as far as the ' Argentine-Brazilian border ,ninety miles upstream. The vast artificial 1 lake has eliminated therapicl that t gave their name to the area (Salto Grande and Salto Chico). Now there is a canal some seven miles' long, with two locks on the ) Argentine side. ? Water for tourist recreation. 'tz Water for sports fishing. Water for t commercial fishing ? the catch is expected to reach seven thousand tons annually. Salto Grande has had many more effects. The electrical het- works of Argentina and Uruguay are integiated. Along the top of the dam. another connecting highway haS been opened, and, for the first time, the nterconnection of the Argentine and Uruguayan railways has become possible. According to the -U.S. Geological Survey, South America has a hydroelectric potential of 500 million kilowatts. Upstream on the Parana River the largest dam in the world is under construction 'f between Brazil and Paraguay ? the Itaipil Binational Dam, which will provide 12 million kilowatts. On the same river, Argentina and Paraguay are building the Yacyreta Apipe Darn, to providei 3.5 million kiloWatts, and the OAS The Organization of American States gave the project the benefit of its studies on the River Plate Basin, and in 1973 the Inter- American Development Bank' (IDB) extended international credit with a loan of $200 million. When it was signed for Argentina by Alejamdro Orfila, then his country's ambassador to Washington it was the largest loan ever made by the IDB. The fact that the loan represents only 20 percent of the total cost of the work (USS1 billion) shows how' great a financial effort if means for the two countries of Argentina and Uruguay to furnish such an another royal palace, was built to exalt a triumphant king over the monarchs he had defeated, and in the end the ruins came to be the final monument of his own defeat. Six Million People Salto Grande, a monument of our time, was constructed primarily to improve the standard Of living of six million people Vfl a territory of 115,000 square miles --- the whole of Uruguay plus, in Argentina, the provinces of Entre Rios and Santa Fe and the extreme north of the Province of Buenos Aires. And Salto Grande was not constructed by slaves. Protected by social laws, the workers of both nations enjoy economic, medical, and pension benefits, and in- dustrial safety conditions that, by themselves, are a model of in- ternational labor relations, a veritable new chapter in labor legislation made necessary by the integration of the region. Two housing settlements, one in _ Concordia, Argentina, and the i,rott.er in Salto, Urugi? ay, were built 35th Veal! Sdo Paulo Film Fest Opens Today at MASP SAO PAULO (Brazil Herald) ? Film festivals have always served the function of bringing - to light the experimental and controversial. When they take._ *place in Brazil, they perform a third, equally important function. they screen political films which would otherwise be prevented from reaching the public by the dual pressures of censorship and commercial inviability. Last year, during its 5th" international film festival, the Sao Paulo Museum of Art (MASP) showed for the first time in Brazil, Nacisha Oshima's 'Imperio dos Sen- tidos'. Now, almost a year later, the same film has been given the censor's blessing and is on general release. This year. MASP is concentrating on films. that are unlikely to hit the commercial round ? films from the socialist countries, , from other Latin American-1 cQuntries and experimental films, principally from the United States, Italy, and France. The festival starts today with Reiner Fassbinder's The Wedding of Maria Braun. Among the highlights of the next two weeks are Andy 'Warhol's. 'Flesh', Vokee Schloendorff's The Tin Drum (winner at the last CanneS. festival), Clauber ROcha's t, ldade Da Terra' and Waite,. Fleynowski and' Schumann'S' 'Cambodia, Death and,,,, Resurrection'. In all, there are 35 feature length films and 20 shorts. A different film will be shown each day, in two OtV three cOnSecutive sessions. Entrance is a modest Cr$50. MASP is located on Avenida, Paulista. To accommodate the workers in hundreds of houses and apart- ments. A fleet of buses transports them to the work site and back again every day; and at lunch time, to the communal dining rooms, The outstanding community work ethic is visible in the en- thusiasm of the young guides who take visitors around the works. It is perceptible in the engineers and technicians who explain the project with something more than mere professional interest to visitors as they walk through concrete tunnels and rooms in the entrails of the dam' several yards _ under the bed of the river. There is a consciousness of being a creative part of something visibly great, predictably enduring, humanly useful for others. I imagine that for our generation of high consumption, of discards and disposables, it is a kind of sub- stitute for immortality at least as enduring as the verses of the poet Horace (Exegi monutnentum...) or Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/10/23: CIA-RDP08001297R000800080001-7 the pyramids of Egypt or the cathedrals of Europe. - When we took off from the airport at the Uruguayan city of Salto and the jet, after a' gentle curve, set a course of BuenoS Aires, a little more than 'half ,an hour away it was possible to see on the horizon the sharp outline of the Salto Grande Darn across the Uruguay River. After all, ? perhaps there is something of magic there. Is it nof rnagkal to change the course nature? And isn't the idea Of sudden and marvelous change suggestive of magic? Yes, there must have been :iomething magical about it; but the rest was, and is, simply hard 'work. Argentine RulyM J. de Hoyos, who received his doctorate in ,government from Nev York University, is the coordinator ,of the Latin American Studies program at the University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/10/23: CIA-RDP0800197R00080008000117 Page 2 BRAZIL HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1980 Brazil Heral iEditorial The Trouble = A nekative aspect of Bra- zilian politics is the, difficulty encountered by the members of government to explain clearly and precisely their - administrative aims and programs. The new economic policy announced' last week opens. the eyes of many people to the dif- ficulties of a hard reality which ' the authorities so far seemed ; to ignore. , It is difficult to understand, - however, why these far-rea- ching modifications were announced by the minister of planning during an informal talk with journalist, as if it' were an information item without major importance. The lightheartness in coping with the problems indilcates that the government doe,s not have a definitive strategy for , preparing the people and the ? nation for the dramatic times that will have to be endured as - a result of the new policy. ? Actually, the entire artti-in- flationary policy is to chunv: Instead of looking for solutions in the international finance world, efforts now are to be centered on popular savings, but the nation has been called to participate in the new decisions or give opinions. President Figueiredo's ? address recently to the re- presentatives of commercial associations featured a new style. He said that social peace ? is both a previous condition and a final. result of the po- litical normalization. This - sounds ambiguous. Figueiredo's good intentions are not doubted by the people, but the announcement r7r11_ of an entirely new economic' policy in substitution for an another new economic policy announced one year ago',1 causes concern. Does the President mean the- nation should wait patiently for the, results of the new 'Policy and consequent social peace before complete democratic normality' is e?tablished? This recalls 'what predecessors of Figueir4do used to say, that political demOcraCy depended on the previoUs establishment of "economic democracy'? and "social democracy". But those conditions never were achieved. The Minister of Trade and Industry Camilo Penna dis- covered that "we are entering an area of turbulence." He hinted toward possibilties of what he called a system for compulsory savings. What., does compulsory savings mean? New taxes? Confiscation of revenues? In any case, it would have fea- tures of expropriation of tb frilit of work. But bo definiti.4 olvxhatever has been given on whose revenue would be cog- figcated and who would have to pay new and more taxes. It is evident, however, that a, system of compulsory saving will call also for a compulsory,, political regime. , Promising political 9penin while making it dependent on solution of the economic crisis is ambiguous. Such ambi- guities. historically have been thp Trojan horses for introduc- tion' of totalitarian re- gimes. 0 EST/WO DE SAO PAULO III .1` New Anita Piraja 1980 president of the American Wives of Brazilians club con? filmed the 1981 board as follows: president ? , Patricia Cavalcanti (who was president' in 1971),. vice president -- Kay Barroso (president 1979), Secretary Mary Dreifus, treasurer Kay tea chairman ? Gloria Esteves with Gloria ReiNehneider cers Named of Wives Group assisting, house ? `Danelle Velloso,' member-at-large ? Irene Nei'va de Figueiredo, bulletin ? Verna Mae, Caitro Barbosa, program ? Elizabeth Pereira. Congratulations was expressed to Mary Jane Guerra and her com- mittee for getting the' board together. Midge, Doyle in- troduced the guest speaker ? Patricia Robb who was formerly fashion writer for Women's Wear. 'Daily, Vanity Fair, Harper's Bazaar and free: lance writer for the former U.S. published Brazil Post. Patricia Robb said she was delighted to speak to club members -- she had given talks in the U.S.A. on fashion shows. She spoke on fashion trends Escola Americana: Three Generations _RIO DE JANEIRO (BH) ? 'At a special assembly of tlie High_ Copacabana, Art Show RIO DE JANEIRO (BH) ? An exhibition of paintings by Gerardo de Bar- ros, Hermelindo Fiamingui, Lotha Charoux, Luiz Sacilotto, Maria Leriontina,' Mauricio Nogueira Lima, is currently on view at the Palace-- des Arts gallery oit Arlette Amiel,* Av, Atlantka 4240, ioja 207, Shopping Cassino Atlantico - The exhibition is open from Monday-, Saturday from 11 a.m. ? 10 p.m. School of the Escola Americana of Rio de Janeiro, the school marked the first occasion on which thre,e generations of the same family have been enrolled at the Escola Americapa. With the presence of Mrs. Gilbert E. Strickland, one of the founders in 1937 of the Escola Americana, the school presented special commemorative plaques to her son, Fred W. Strickland, a member of the Class of '44; to Mrs. Ann Louise Strickland Faro, a member of the Class of '70 and Mr. Strickland's daughter; and to Bruno Strickland Faro, newly enrolled in the nursery, a member of the Class of '94. Bruno is 'Mrs. Gilbert Strickland's great-grandson. The assembly was marked by: speeches. in the U.S.A., and also' mentioned that Italy - reflects pants in every- shape and style. In discussion with club members it was agreed ''that Brazilian dress very well in keeping up with fashion trends which are copied here long before they get to New York; however, one finds thatl fashion changes set -quickly that dresses can - only be used for few: occasions. S?Paulo has more sophisticate& clothes and the best winter wear, whereas Rio, has a fabulous selection: of beach wear. It was agreed that most clothes in Rio are for the young and classic styles are not easily available. Following the talk those present enjoyed O, delicious- tea of home-p _backed' 'cakes and cookies. The next meeting of the American Wive 'of Brazilians will be on Dec. ,3 at' 2 p.m. at the home of Susan Zobaran. For infOrmation about the club call president Anita Piraja 227-1700, who welcomes rneW. members ,? the qualification is that you, have to be an Americah Married to a Brazilian., RIO DE JANEIRO (1311) ? Prior to the Navy League dinner dance held on October 18 at the Club :Vfonte Libano to host Admiral Peter K. Cullins, his wife, Valaree and fellow Anieriean and Brazilian naval officers cf the Joint UNITAS XXI Naval Maneuvers:, U.S. Consul General John De Witt weldomed them to Rio with a cocktail buffet theU.S? Consulate General. Ray inonde Vasconcellos A n album was told of life in the school p rese nted t o t he when it was first founded Strickland family, in a building on Vieira, containing photographs Souto. Vasconcellos has of the graduating class of been with the American 1940 and of all of the School since 1938. Isabel school buildings past and Pinto, secretary of the present. High School, spoke about , Attending , the incidents in the second ceremony were Ian Scott, '44. home of the school, located in Leblon. Pinto Chamber ltlember has completed 34 years of service as secretary. Dr. president of the Board of Directors; Jame,s Stricklarid, "Bill's" younger' bother and a member of the Class of '52; and Mrs. Isabelle Rendall, a. former member of the board and a member of the Class of Offers Clerical Help Gilbert C. Brown, the SYLVIA IIARKALY1 'or herself offering headmaster, then spoke whom must of the ousiness services: about, humorous , in- American,. ,., community. Printing production. cidents in the founding of, knew when she was 4 (annual reports, leafletsr the' present site of, the staff' member at the house , newsletterSi school on Estrada da 'American, Chamber" ol projects), microfilming Gavea?. many years, business! (services, . equipmenti, , - 'testing), " acquisitions ordic Bazaar Slated mergers (consultant), translations (English- To Be Held in Rio Portuguese; English), , and escort-interpreter 0 DE JANEIRO, caviar? herrings, -1(for business visitors), (BH) ? The traditional, glassware; etc. Nordic Fair Scacan. ' .7 The Nordic fair is for. Her address is AL dinavian haiaai will be the, benefit of the Gabriel Monteiro d4 held oil NOV. 18 from 11 Scandinavian- Seamen's. 1253, apartment 81 at gni Mission administered by 01441, Sao Paulo BarbOsa. 174, 2nd floor.' Swedish Pastor Hans telephone (oil) 2821 Princess Itagnbild-Mrs. RogIvstee. 6456.. Erling Lorentzen,' will open the haxaar. ' . Irish Vice Consul ,Neyda acintho Villela of the Rede and, Rogcrio, sow" of Mr. -en dos Santos, exchanged mate Silo Bento Monaster-, r 25. The newlyweds will, anta Teresa. The bride will , work at the Rio Cultura i as an electronic engineer. Danish open - sand wiches, Swedish' bread and pastries will be- served'with coffee. There will be many , Scan- dinavian items for gifts, Christmas deCorations, home-made candled (nod-drip), Swedish nual Thansgiving est ai,US consulate luo DE JANEIRO (BH) ? The traditional Thanksgiving service will be held at the U.S. Consulate on Thursday Nov. 27, with coffee and pumpkin pie at 10 a.m. and an ecumenical service at 11 a.m., with the participation of the Escola Americana chorus, under the direction of Laura Chipe. ers To Hold Bi-National Workshop DISsalc4r,' S age t a Dabhart, Lynn Fedorka, audience fully ap- selection, and were Jackson, Susie Lewis,, Larraine Monteito, Dick predated the wit and helped in its presentation d Laura chipe, Ruth and and Marta Rofritch, Bill humanity of such con- by Marcia Krengiel, Luis a - Ed Staton, Katie Benton, Seydorka, Andre Merril tempory literary figures Cunha and Tulio Simons g Vicki and CleT Kobrak, Giag Worthington and as Carlos Drummond de Reis. a Ken Pollard,- Reg .Bill Cipolla. Andrade, Manuel Sturrock,- Chris Hieatt, After the interval B an de ir a Ce cilia The next tvorkshop If Rabin Brown,- Fiona Brazilian members took Meireles and Vinicius de 1970 1980 will take Brown; Nellike Beith, the stage, persenting MoraeS, plus the foot place on Nov. 27 at 8:30 d Chas Mabau, Jose Sabel modern Brazilian poetry tapping rhyihmns of p.m. at the Community it Maria Auxiliardora, and music in Portuguese popular music. John and Hall, Real Grandeza In ',Christine Nestor, Brandy_ and translation. The Ewa Proctor arranged the 99. h, ArrtinAM I- rn1 AR I- I IAA 71 ir, Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/10/23: CIA-RDP08001297R000800080001-7 I ?