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Its energy is known for being clean, but its rapid expansion across Brazil’s Northeast region has not been so polished. In the state of Bahia, the country’s leader in wind generation
communities in at least 11 municipalities are experiencing conflicts with companies in the sector
some of which have been involved in disputes for more than a decade
Some 248 wind farms operate day and night in Bahia, generating 33% of Brazil’s wind energy, with another 196 plants under construction or planned in the state, according to official data
a hybrid wind and solar project with 405 turbines
promises to be the largest of its kind in the country
But as wind power plants have advanced across the state they have coveted lands already occupied by farming villages
when cattle breeding expanded into the Caatinga
the semi-arid shrubland biome of northeastern Brazil
Many of these communities practise a form of commons-based family farming known as fundo de pasto (lit: “pasture fund”)
with no delimitations or fencing and on which traditions of their ancestors are maintained – usually without formal land titles
These disputes occur mainly in the “wind corridors”
areas in the interior of Bahia where the constancy and speed of the winds guarantee ideal conditions for energy generation
by the semi-arid climate and by precarious land governance live
Eleven municipalities in Bahia state currently have communities with some type of conflict or complaint against large-scale wind developments
according to data obtained by the reporter from Articulação Estadual de Fundo e Fecho de Pasto and Central das Associações de Fundo e Fecho de Pasto
two organisations representing these commons-farming communities
While some traditional communities enter into dispute directly with the companies
as families differ on the installation of wind farms
Political disorganisation also usually weakens their efforts to obtain land titles and protect their areas
“It is a clean energy with dirty methods,” says Marina Rocha
an agent of the Pastoral Land Commission (CPT) in Juazeiro
“We don’t know of any company that has arrived in the communities in a reasonably honest way.”
the CPT is one of the most active organisations in the defence of rural communities’ rights
Rocha says she has come across contracts that are generally obscure and have a legal language that rural communities generally do not understand
Campo Formoso, a municipality in the north of Bahia state some 450 kilometres from its capital city, Salvador, has 22 fundo de pasto commons, some dating back to the 17th century, according to a mapping done by the Federal University of Bahia (UFBA) alongside the state government
The region has already experienced previous economic booms from the mining of precious stones and the cultivation of sisal
a plant adapted from the Caatinga that is used in the production of fabrics
the great wind power potential of Campo Formoso
The municipality’s own logo now features a drawing of turbines atop the Serra de Jacobina
But the power plants did not arrive without causing impacts
an association representing fundo de pasto farmers in a community called Fazenda Quina signed a contract with multinational CGN Brazil Energy
for the installation of three turbines on a site where 12 families live
The company is a subsidiary of CGN Energy International
CGN Brazil Energy was starting to install what became the Complexo Eólico Morrinhos
a wind farm complex consisting of six units with a total installed capacity of 180 megawatts
“As entrepreneurs in the sector generally do not own land in rural Brazil
long-term leases are the most common way of accessing land for the installation of turbines
It happens that in most areas of wind energy potential in the northeast there are peasants
many of them with traditional ways of life,” explains Carolina Ribeiro
a professor at the Federal University of Parnaíba Delta (UFDPar) in the state of Piauí
who studied the conflicts experienced by communities in Brotas de Macaúbas
Although he admits that the monthly payment received by the community – on average
4,500 reais (US$840) – helps in the improvement of community infrastructure
president of the Fazenda Quina association
complains about the lack of transparency on the part of the company
The agreed upon monthly payment is 1.5% of the turbines’ energy generation
but the community does not know how the calculation is made
whether it is based on the gross or net value of energy production
they say that this information is not disclosed
We don’t know how much they produce and how they market the energy,” Salvo complains
The Brazilian office of CGN Brazil Energy told Diálogo Chino that it has a WhatsApp contact for tenants to communicate with it
and that it is working on a tool to make its wind generation data available
The company did not accept an interview and commented that it does not publicly comment on commercial issues related to contracts it signs with individuals
out of respect for the group’s compliance and confidentiality policies
the main characteristic of fundo de pasto communities is their occupation and use of communal areas
they hold the titles to land occupied by descendants of black and indigenous communities
and form agricultural settlements in areas without fences – the so-called solta or “loose” land that extends behind their houses
This strategy guarantees the survival of the animals in the dry Caatinga
where rainfall is naturally irregular and river flows intermittent
The communities have learnt to give more space for the animals to graze in search of food and water on greener patches
UFBA’s mapping identified 585 pasture commons associations and 1,092 communities linked to them in Bahia
“This number does not represent the totality of communities
but only those that we were able to identify,” says Guiomar Germani
She believes that the number could be much higher
no land title has been issued to such communities
it becomes clearer that the state is acting not to meet the historical demand [to grant titles to squatting communities]
but to the interests of the private sector,” criticises Germani
Germani warns about the introduction of a legal norm favouring energy companies
signed by the state government and the state Attorney General’s office in 2020
the patrimony of public lands to the management of wind farms,” she says
An assessment by the Association of Rural Workers of Bahia (AATR) cites controversial points in the ruling
such as the fact that the wind energy company can select the area of interest and negotiate it directly with the state
disregarding the right of communities to prior consultation
something guaranteed by Convention 169 of the International Labour Organisation
the legal norm does not define criteria of environmental protection of the Caatinga or of the cultural heritage with which companies should comply when installing wind complexes
Also in Campo Formoso and neighbouring Fazenda Quina
the Borda da Mata fundo de pasto community has not signed a contract
despite harassment by wind firms over its territory since 2011
says that at that time he took the document proposed by the company
and his lawyer detected that 40% of the clauses threatened the rights of the community
which they intend to present if wind farms knock on their door once again
Cruz says he is not against the development of the cleaner energy mix
“is the misleading way wind farms arrive in the communities
selling illusions and talking only about the money without clarifying about the contract.”
30 families live off the agro-ecological production of vegetables
The “loose” area is preserved as a reserve for the Caatinga’s natural vegetation
where typical cacti flourish in the trovoadas (rainy season)
and thorny bushes impede passage through the forest
many companies are taking over land and harming our people,” Cruz says
The Brazilian Wind Energy Association (Abeeólica)
which represents 120 companies in the industry
recognises that the sector is growing very fast and needs to accelerate its development of sustainable standards
“We have noticed some loopholes in regulation
but we are committed to mitigating the impacts with the creation of a best practices guide
as well as a sustainability seal,” the association’s president
adherence to socio-environmental rules for certification will be voluntary
The executive says that the transfer of 1.5% of the proceeds from generation has been accepted by communities
reiterating that it is the same percentage paid by oil royalties in Brazilian municipalities
the industry pays 2,000 reais [US$375] per turbine per month
so I don’t think this is the problem,” Gannoum says
the complaints are about transparency in generation accounts
According to fundo de pasto leaders in Campo Formoso
the monthly amount paid per turbine is around 1,500 reais (US$280)
Values and forms of payment tend to vary from municipality to municipality
A year after the federal government’s first auction to exclusively contract wind power in 2009
Companhia Hidrelétrica do São Francisco (Chesf)
Brazil’s largest electricity generation company
began construction of its first wind farm in Bahia
The Casa Nova I power plant was announced as
the largest in the country and marked Chesf’s entry into the renewable sector
Four years later, however, the financial crisis of the Argentine wind turbine manufacturer IMPSA, which was the leader of the consortium, resulted in the works being paralysed
30 unfinished turbines remain abandoned at the site
The theft of copper wires from the structures has brought violence to the region
22 families live among these environmental liabilities
were not removed from the area and continue to obstruct paths between communities and the grazing of animals
“They no longer came and when the gate was locked
we would not have accepted the work,” says farmer Jessé de Souza Alves
Souza receives 500 reais (US$94) monthly in rent for the land from Chesf
and complains about the devastation caused by the earth moving on the site
He estimates that Casa Nova I knocked down about 50 of the 300 hectares of native vegetation belonging to the community
but they [the companies] don’t do right when they come here,” laments the farmer
and the whole mess was left there.” Chesf did not respond to queries about environmental liabilities
Casa Nova is a Bahia municipality where 86% of the population is vulnerable to poverty and which has a history of violent rural conflicts. In 1978, families from the pasture commons of the Areia Grande community armed themselves and faced Camaragibe
an agribusiness company accused of land grabbing
The squatters expelled the hired guns of the company
Farmer Vaneide dos Santos, president of the fundo de pasto association for the communities of Garapa and Baraúna, was a child and lived in Areia Grande at the time of the dispute. Also as a child, her family was forcibly relocated for the construction of the Sobradinho dam, which evicted 72,000 people from their homes and flooded seven municipalities
She harbours traumas from such large energy ventures
“The companies do not come to bring benefits
“I have been undisturbed since I left Areia Grande
eight kilometres from one of the construction sites of the Oitis Wind Farm
Spanish multinational Iberdrola is installing two of the 12 wind farms that began operating this year
With funding from the European Investment Bank
the power generation of the 12 plants will be connected to the national grid
The company will focus on selling the production in the free energy market to which Brazilian households – and most companies – still do not have access
will not bring any energy security to her backyard
let alone cheaper energy for the community in Garapa
and Santos is still trying to sign up for the social energy tariff
as she struggles to pay the 200 reais (US$37) monthly bills
but the energy was low and was only enough for essential tasks such as keeping the refrigerator running
Some of the world’s most modern turbines have arrived in Casa Nova
while families living next door still face energy insecurity
“complies with all procedures provided for in Brazilian environmental legislation and regulation
which demonstrates its commitment to sustainable development and respect for society.”
Vaneide Santos’ family is one of five in the association who oppose the project
“The families who are in agreement with them don’t have much information about how companies act in Brazil,” Santos comments
No one in their community, Garapa, has a land title. They do not have title to the fundo de pasto communal areas, nor to the individual areas, private to each family.
Lilian Caramel is an independent journalist based in São Paulo whose work focuses on the agricultural sector
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VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Pope Francis formally recognized the martyrdom of an Italian priest shot by Nazi soldiers after they discovered he was helping his parishioners hide about 100 Jews
was one of nine decrees in sainthood causes Pope Francis signed May 20
The help Father Beotti “offered to many Jewish people persecuted by the Nazi-Fascists played a decisive role” in his death
according to the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints
the priest had mobilized all the parishioners” and helped them hide and feed about 100 Jews
but found nothing,” but they continued to hold him while they gathered information about his activities
The recognition of his martyrdom clears the way for his beatification
The eight other decrees signed by the pope involved the recognition that the candidates heroically lived the Christian virtues
A miracle attributed to the candidate’s intercession would be needed for beatification
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