Page added on January 5, 2007
Plans to build the world’s largest natural gas pipeline through 5,000 miles (8,047 kilometers) of South American wilderness are prompting warnings of environmental calamity.
Known as Gasoducto del Sur, or Southern Gas Pipeline, the proposed 21-billion-dollar (U.S.) structure would connect Venezuela’s rich natural gas fields to Argentine markets.
But to do this the pipeline would have to cross through several ecologically vulnerable regions, including Brazil’s Amazon rain forest.
Such a project would threaten both the environment and local cultures, activist groups contend.
“This plan is a gigantic threat to fishing and farming communities, from the Gulf of Paria [between northeastern Venezuela and the island of Trinidad] all the way to the Great Savannah, which is part of the Canaima National Park,” said Maria Eugenia Bustamante, co-director of AMIGRANSA, a Venezuelan environmental group.
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