The LNG terminal will supply natural gas to NFE’s 630MW power plant
$250m (excluding FSRU conversion costs)
The Barcarena liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal is strategically situated at the mouth of the Amazon River in Para
and serves as the region’s sole natural gas supply source
the terminal is the first of its kind in the state of Para and the northern region of Brazil
The capital expenditure for the commissioning of the Barcarena terminal is estimated to be up to $250m
It excludes the additional $75m to $85m required for the conversion of the Energos Celsius floating storage regasification unit (FSRU)
Operations at the new six million tonnes per annum LNG terminal commenced in February 2024
The terminal not only caters to the energy needs of the region’s extensive economic activities but also contributes to delivering cleaner
and more sustainable energy to the Amazon river basin
It will also supply natural gas to NFE’s 630MW power plant
which is currently under construction adjacent to the terminal
The power plant remains on track to achieve commercial operation in the third quarter of 2025
NFE plans to leverage its existing infrastructure in Barcarena to strategically expand its power complex by 1.6GW
with an expected commercial operation date in July 2026
The Barcarena terminal encompasses an onshore LNG terminal, the Energos Celsius FSRU, and related infrastructure including a mooring system and offshore and onshore pipelines
The FSRU is located at a fixed jetty structure approximately 1,000m from the shore
The mooring point for the FSRU is located 1.2km offshore at a water depth of approximately 15m
The terminal can process up to 790,000 million British thermal units per day and store up to 170,000m3 of LNG
It is expected to utilise approximately 92,000 million British thermal units per day of LNG
about 12% of the terminal’s maximum regasification capacity to service the adjacent Barcarena power plant
Energos Celsius is owned by Energos Infrastructure
a global marine infrastructure platform backed by Apollo funds and NFE
The former LNG carrier is on a long-term charter to NFE under a 25-year terminal user agreement
FSRU Energos Celsius has a nominal regasification capacity of 750 million standard cubic feet per day
with a maximum capacity of up to 1,000 million standard cubic feet per day
The FSRU can store and regasify LNG for supply to the Barcarena power plant and other end-users including Alunorte
LNG carrier ships dock alongside the FSRU for LNG cargo delivery and offloading
NFE signed a memorandum of understanding with Norsk Hydro in July 2020 for a 15-year gas supply agreement
marking the first operational customer for the Barcarena Terminal
NFE will supply Norsk Hydro’s Alunorte refinery with roughly 30 trillion British thermal units of natural gas annually
which is anticipated to reduce the refinery’s annual carbon dioxide emissions by an estimated 700,000 tonnes per annum
The supply agreement aligns with Norsk Hydro’s 2030 global commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 30%
Seatrium, an innovative engineering solutions provider to the global offshore, marine, and energy industries, was responsible for the conversion of the Energos Celsius LNG carrier into the FSRU
The converted Energos Celsius FSRU was delivered in December 2023
The project marked Seatrium’s fourth FSRU endeavour in Brazil
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energy infrastructure company New Fortress Energy (NFE) has welcomed the floating storage and regasification unit (FSRU) Energos Celsius at its LNG terminal in Barcarena
NFE announced the arrival of Energos Celsius via social media on February 23
The 160,000 cubic meter Energos Celsius departed Seatrium’s shipyard in Singapore in December 2023 after the conversion work
The unit has a nominal regasification capacity of 750 – 1,000 million standard cubic feet per day
The FSRU will be a part of NFE’s LNG terminal development at Barcarena
which includes a long-term gas contract to supply Norsk Hydro at the Alunorte alumina refinery
a 630 MW gas-to-power project under construction by NFE and further power and fuel expansion projects in the region
The Barcarena LNG import terminal is said to be the first LNG import facility in the state of Pará and the Northern region of Brazil
In November 2023, NFE executed definitive agreements to fund up to $575 million in asset-based financing to complete the construction of its 630 MW Barcarena power plant
located adjacent to its LNG import terminal
is on track to commence operations in the third quarter of 2025 under a 25-year power purchase agreement (PPA) with several electricity distribution companies in Brazil
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Why Mitsubishi Power
Path to Net Zero
Locations
2024) - The consortium formed by Mitsubishi Power Americas
(Mitsubishi Power) and CONSAG Engenharia – an Andrade Gutierrez company (CONSAG) recently signed an agreement with Portocem Geração de Energia S.A
and construction (EPC) of the Portocem Thermoelectric Power Plant (UTE Portocem) in Brazil.
(parent company of Mitsubishi Power) headquarters and included representatives from all parties of the consortium
The event celebrated this milestone achievement in Brazil’s largest simple cycle gas thermal power plant through a traditional Japanese Daruma doll ceremony
The Daruma doll is a custom used when setting a wish or a goal
and this symbolizes the communal goal for Portocem to be a successful project.
In the EPC agreement Mitsubishi Power will supply four M501JAC enhanced air-cooled gas turbines to operate in simple cycle at UTE Portocem
CONSAG will be responsible for providing the balance of plant
and commissioning of the plant as well as the implementation of the transmission line and substation
This collaboration will result in providing 1.6 GW of firm
dispatchable power capacity in what will be Brazil’s largest peaking power plant and one of the largest power plants ever built in Latin America
to provide reliable energy to the national grid in Brazil
supplying much-needed additional capacity to back the existing reliance on hydropower
The project and its 15-year Capacity Reserve Contract received full regulator approval in March 2024
Portocem Geração de Energia S.A was the biggest winner of the first Power Capacity Reserve Auction in December 2021
and the project marks Mitsubishi Power’s third advanced technology heavy duty gas turbine project in Brazil in 5 years for a total of approximately 2.6 GW of gas turbine capacity.
with construction of the thermal power plant already in progress
NFE recently completed construction and commissioning of the Barcarena LNG terminal which will supply LNG to more than 2.2 GWs of capacity (owned by NFE) in Para
“The UTE Portocem project is yet another example of how the Brazilian power generation sector is recognizing the need for advanced
cleaner power generation technology to meet the needs of a changing market,” said Tim Shore
Senior Vice President of LATAM Commercial and Regional Leader for Mitsubishi Power Americas
we have the technology to support this transition and we thank Portocem Geração de Energia S.A for choosing us for this important project.”
Brazil’s energy usage has varied in recent years
in part due to droughts and environmental factors
and in part due to 99.5% of all homes becoming electrified
In a second update of its NDC (October 2023)
Brazil set ambitious decarbonization targets
with a 49% cut in GHG emissions by 2025 and 53% by 2030 when compared to 2005 levels
with the objective to reach carbon neutrality by 2050 (Enerdata).
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Barcarena – a traditional Quilombola territory in Pará – saw little of the development promised when the industrial complex was established with several mining enterprises — especially Imerys and Albras Alunorte
a Norwegian company currently known as Norsk Hydro
when the federal government — then a military dictatorship — created the Barcarena Development Company (CODEBAR)
in charge of implementing the industrial complex
the territory underwent changes so companies could operate according to the demands of a market driven by a government that was in a hurry to turn the Amazon into an asset that would only benefit mining companies and their projects — which were harmful to the environment and life
in addition to charges of environmental crimes
Despite evidence provided by scholars and the population affected
Norsk Hydro has categorically denied any involvement
the area where the municipality is located used to be Quilombola territory
The oldest document confirming land tenure dates from 1986
It says that the Pará Land Institute holds the rights over the land through acquirer Manoel Joaquim dos Santos
a predecessor of the main Quilombola leaders who now struggle for the right to exist in the territory
who is now the leader of the Gibrié do São Lourenço Quilombo
invasion by mining companies was possible only because CODEBAR did not have a land policy for the area
it was hard to move forward with negotiations
but those who didn’t were done,” he tells Mongabay
is now their weapon to recover the lands expropriated by CODEBAR at the time
“They won’t let us have the titles because then they wouldn’t be able to sell the land or negotiate it in the future,” says Bubuia
“There are more than 300 families struggling to exist.”
is one of the main Quilombola leaders in Barcarena
He says his people face problems that go beyond contamination by mining companies
He tells Mongabay there is a consortium including the municipal government and mining companies
which dates back to the beginning of Barcarena’s growth process and is led by CODEBAR
which completely ignored the existence of Quilombola territories
the first invasion happened in the district of Vila dos Cabanos
where facilities were built to accommodate mining companies’ top staff
Even the schools began to be attended only by the children of the companies’ employees
is that these lands historically belonged to the Quilombola — including the area where the 14th Military (State) Police Battalion is now located
“If you do archaeological research in these areas where the Battalion and the Cabanos Club are located
you’ll will find artifacts that prove our previous presence in this area,” says Chip
the Barcarena municipal government acted in bad faith at the time
for it was aware of the process of land mapping and demarcation being carried out by INCRA (Brazil’s National Institute for Colonization and Agrarian Reform) in favor of the Quilombola communities
the city built a wall around the area that had been set for titling
which made it impossible for us to access it,” Chip explains
“They built it in record time and put a sign there that says it was a preservation area owned by the municipality of Barcarena
The city invaded the land that INCRA had guaranteed was ours.”
The latest arbitrary decision by the Barcarena municipal government was the attempt by the company Águas de São Francisco to vacate an area where a sewage treatment unit operated in Quilombola territory
evicting families from the place at a time when the COVID-19 pandemic was at its deadliest
But Supreme Court Justice Edson Fachin ruled in favor of the families
saying it was an area over which neither the city nor the water and sanitation company were able to prove ownership
which took an aggressive stance toward those families and even lied on TV and social media
saying that locals wanted the land to sell it,” says Chip
and their houses were demolished with their furniture inside
Damiana Oliveira dos Santos noticed a hairless spot on her daughter Rebeca’s head
The girl’s curly hair was falling out and had been replaced by sores
She and her husband took their daughter to the hospital in the state capital Belém
she discovered that the girl’s head was also full of rashes
The whole community cried when they saw that our daughter and I were bald,” she tells Mongabay at her home
less than two miles from Hydro’s industrial complex
but nobody would tell us what those numbers meant
What they now know — and studies prove — is that everything in Barcarena — people
water and fish — shows signs of contamination
The origin most likely is the chemical waste dumped by mining companies in the local rivers
lead and nickel are some of the metals present in medical reports from institutes such as Evandro Chagas and labs such as the Laboratory of Analytical and Environmental Chemistry (LAQUANAM) at the Federal University of Pará (UFPA)
thin brittle skin and several cases of cancer
Norsk Hydro denies these cases are related to its operation
Professor Simone de Fátima Pinheiro Pereira
has conducted research in the mining area for more than 40 years and has closely monitored the environmental crimes committed in Barcarena for 15 years
at the request of the Federal Prosecution Service
it analyzed the water used for consumption in the region
and 24 of them were contaminated by lead,” she tells Mongabay
river sediment: Everything I collected for analysis was contaminated
I also analyzed community residents’ hair and found levels 27 times above our control,” she says
comparing samples with people outside the area covered by the study
Pereira reports that the two companies causing the worst impacts on that region are Hydro and Imerys
a bauxite waste deposit installed near Quilombola communities
The dam has been decommissioned but millions of tons of toxic red mud are still there
the mud overflows and goes into the surrounding rivers — Murucupi and Pará — carrying metals such as chromium
lead and nickel — all of which are carcinogenic if people are exposed to them for a long time
“I went to Hydro to collect red mud for analysis at the request of the Federal Prosecution Service
but they won’t let me disclose the results,” Pereira says
“Even with an order from the prosecution service
they threatened me with a lawsuit if I analyzed the samples
but I had to sign a nondisclosure agreement
Hydro is all over the world and a lawsuit is nothing for them.”
“My husband was supposed to be here with me
I saw my husband lose one foot and end up in a wheelchair because of this unchecked development,” says Maria do Socorro Costa da Silva
she is one of the most important leaders in Barcarena
She shows the reports from the Evandro Chagas Institute and UFPA that found high levels of heavy metals in her hair
and she tells what happened to her husband
whose diabetes worsened with the contamination: “He started scratching his eyes
but we continued using the water until people from the university came to carry out tests on us
we had official confirmation that the water was contaminated
This struggle has been going on for 10 years
Socorro herself scratches her body a lot while talking to the reporters
and says that part of Barcarena’s population is like her now
She took the Quilombola claims beyond the borders of Pará and Brazil by filing a collective lawsuit on behalf of 40,000 people affected by aluminum production
where the Court of Rotterdam will hear it and decide on its merits
Mongabay contacted Norsk Hydro about the lawsuit and the company replied
“The case filed in the Netherlands is related to local issues
which are already being discussed in Brazilian courts
The case is just a derivative of the same accusations against Brazilian entities
Hydro will present its defense in accordance with the procedures defined by the Court.”
Hydro added that it “strongly denies the allegations made by the plaintiffs
The company is committed to being a good neighbor
environment and safety first wherever it operates
Alunorte’s and Albras’ activities in the region are duly licensed
and operations are monitored and audited by the authorities.”
Mongabay has also sent questions to the Barcarena municipal government but has not received a response as of this writing
The “fortress conservation” model is under pressure in East Africa
as protected areas become battlegrounds over history
and global efforts to halt biodiversity loss
Mongabay’s Special Issue goes beyond the region’s world-renowned safaris to examine how rural communities and governments are reckoning with conservation’s colonial origins
and trying to forge a path forward […]
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The Vila do Conde complex at Barcarena Port, which bears the scars of industrial development, will be the final stop of a new Chinese-backed railway (Image: Programa de Aceleraçaõ do Crescimento)
Sandra Amorim’s family has lived on the same patch of land in the eastern Brazilian Amazon
now she is surrounded by the sounds and sights of industrial development
The expansion of a nearby port in Barcarena
a municipality in the north of Pará state across the water from the city of Belém
has clashed with many traditional communities
With a new Chinese-financed railway expected to boost development
Barcarena is home to the Vila do Conde port that will be the final stop on the Pará Railway
a stretch of tracks running 492km up from the city of Marabá
China Communications Construction Company (CCCC) signed a statement of intent with Pará’s government to invest R$7 billion (US$1.6 billion) in the railway
the largest foreign infrastructure investment in Brazil
The bulk of the railroad’s cargo will be iron ore
the railway will extend further south to the city of Santana do Araguaia
and link to a country-wide network of tracks that run to Rio Grande do Sul in the far south
grains and cattle will be carted in and shipped to the world from the port’s strategic position near the mouth of the Amazon
Pará’s government says the railway will further stimulate its economy, bringing jobs and raising income. It will lower transportation costs and increase productivity in mining operations, including at Carajás
where Brazilian mining giant Vale digs some 120 million tonnes of metal per year from the world largest open iron ore pit
New metal processing facilities will generate higher profits still
CCCC and Vale are also investing R$1.8bn (US$410 million) in a steel rolling mill in Marabá
the railway will exacerbate conflict in a place where the petrol stations
and workers’ houses that have swelled the Vila do Conde industrial complex to 4 million m2 since its establishment in the 1980s
Pará already bears the scars of industrial development
a freighter bound for Venezuela capsized on leaving the port
spilling hundreds of gallons of fuel and leaving hundreds of dying cattle on Barcarena’s beaches to rot in the sun
heavy rains led to a chemical spill at Alunorte
owned by Norwegian metals company Norsk Hydro
Norsk Hydro denied responsibility for the spill and Alunorte recently resumed full production
But Barcarena’s communities don’t eat local fish anymore and only drink bottled water
Faced with a changing world and pressure to leave
every year tens of thousands of trucks move tirelessly along potholed roads leading into the port
swirling up clouds of dust from the reddish ground into the hot
At the entrance to the Africa quilombo (Afro-descendant community settlements)
a young boy standing on a small wooden bridge fishes in a stream
The railroad tracks will cross through neighbouring quilombos
but Africa residents say they will be still be affected
Barcarena is 18km away but its expanding footprint is already palpable
A nearby water processing plant that recently arrived extracts water from the same streams
powerlines and hospitals will be built nearby
With so many strange people passing through
The idea that huge infrastructure projects will benefit everyone is simply not true
and increasing levels of crime and marginalisation.”
The railroad will pass through 23 municipalities, crossing through or close to several quilombo communities and smallholder farming plots, and two indigenous villages. Pará’s government has said the line will be adjusted to affect people as little as possible
People living ten kilometres from the tracks will receive compensation payments
But nature doesn’t respect the arbitrary limits used in impact plans
and those lying outside them will still feel the impacts: “Does water respect ten kilometre [limits]
Does contaminated land respect ten kilometres?”
Giffoni also says that local communities weren’t consulted about the railway before the State government announced the plans
Researchers say the railway will increase deforestation by opening up previously inaccessible land
“The tendency is that where you have embarking points
you have expanding deforestation,” says Paulo Barreto
Further forest loss will result from increased mining activities
which can triple deforestation rates across the Amazon basin
an environmental scientist at Australia’s University of Queensland
Deforestation stretched up to 70km outside the confines of major projects
mining-induced deforestation accounted for 9% of total Amazon deforestation
Pará holds 3% of the world’s deposits of iron ore, copper, bauxite, gold, and other minerals, according to the state government
The Pará Railroad dovetails with plans to boost mining
which accounts for a quarter of the state’s GDP
The number of mining cities will grow from 55 to 80
mining is projected to bring in US$30 billion
regional biodiversity would be also affected by deforestation
forest fragmentation and the risk of invasive species: “Environmental impact assessments often underestimate the negative impacts of mining on biodiversity
purely because they don’t examine the indirect impacts that emerge at broader scales.”
lowering transport costs will fuel the continued expansion of the beef industry
one of the main drivers of Brazilian Amazonian deforestation
a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at Boston University’s Global Development Policy Center
China’s demand for beef is surging and it is looking to import more from Brazil
the Brazilian government is making a choice of development strategy
Once the railway is connected to adjacent networks
soy will also become cheaper and faster to draw up through the country
Chinese demand for Brazilian soy has “skyrocketed” in recent years
especially since the onset of trade tensions with the US
Brazilian exports of soy to China nearly doubled
“Traditional agro-industrial and mining interests will benefit
while the communities who have suffered from the environmental impacts of those interests will suffer more,” Ray says
According to Edna Castro, a sociologist at the Federal University of Pará, the railway fits into a wider dynamic of development happening in the state and elsewhere in the Amazon. Over thirty new ports are planned, along with works to support water transportation, and new power lines
Once forest is cleared and the land is no longer suitable for grazing
transforming Pará into major producer in a few years’ time
CCCC’s investment in strengthening food and other raw material supply lines has caused controversy in a number of international projects
The company has been linked with a series conflicts in the past
where local communities were hit by dredging
destruction of coral reefs and eroded land during construction of the Port City Colombo development
the World Bank blacklisted CCCC after alleged fraudulent bidding practices on a highway in the Philippines
Ray doesn’t think the blame for any social and environmental fallout should fall squarely on the Chinese
Her research suggests Chinese investors like CCCC adhere to host country environmental and social regulations in attempts to avoid diplomatic disputes
having accepted the environmental and social consequences of that choice,” she says
Amorim often glances at her fence. So many new faces have arrived in the area, it’s hard to know who might be coming, she says. Police regularly stop by her house after she received death threats. She has been assaulted near her home three times and laments the rising crime, prostitution and murder that the influx of outsiders have brought to Barcarena
Richard Kemeney is a freelance journalist based in Brazil
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has announced the operational status of its 6 MTPA Barcarena LNG terminal in Pará
with the Energos Celsius Floating Storage Regasification Unit (FSRU) now in operation on-site
The commissioning of the terminal was celebrated at an event co-hosted by NFE
and the Ministry of Mines and Energy for Brazil
attended by key officials including Helder Barbalho
the Minister of Mines and Energy for Brazil
the terminal aims to reduce emissions and pollution in the environmentally sensitive Amazon region by offering a cleaner
and reliable alternative to oil-based fuels
NFE anticipates immediate natural gas delivery to Norsk Hydro’s Alunorte refinery under the 15-year gas supply agreement. The supply will amount to approximately 30 TBtus of natural gas annually, reducing the refinery’s CO2 emissions by an estimated 700,000 tonnes per annum and aligning with Norsk Hydro's global commitment to a 30% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030
the Barcarena terminal will supply natural gas to NFE’s 630 MW power plant
currently under construction adjacent to the terminal
The power plant remains on track for completion in the third quarter of 2025
with approximately 50% of the project already completed
NFE plans to strategically expand its power complex by 1.6 GW under the previously announced New Power Project PPA
with an expected completion no later than July 2026
NFE has applied to transfer the New Power Project PPA to a permitted site adjacent to the Barcarena terminal and expects to close the acquisition in the first quarter of 2024
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New Fortress’ facility consists of an offshore terminal and an FSRU that will supply LNG to several customers
An LNG tanker anchored at a transport and storage terminal
New Fortress Energy’s 6 million tonnes per annum Barcarena LNG terminal in Pará
is now operational with the Energos Celsius floating storage regasification unit on-site (FSRU)
Barcarena serves as the sole natural gas supply source in the state of Pará and northern Brazil
The facility consists of an offshore terminal and an FSRU that will supply LNG to several customers
including a 15-year supply agreement with Norsk Hydro’s Alunorte alumina refinery
New Fortress says it will supply the alumina with 30 TBtu of natural gas annually to reduce the refinery’s CO2 emissions by about 700,000 tonnes per annum
The Barcarena terminal will also supply natural gas to New Fortess’ 630-megawatt power plant
which is currently 50% complete and adjacent to the terminal
The power plant is on track to achieve completions operations date in third quarter 2025
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procurement and construction (EPC) contract for the power plant was awarded to a consortium of Mitsubishi Power Americas and Andrade Gutierrez
US energy infrastructure company New Fortress Energy (NFE) has begun the construction of a 1.6GW gas-fired power plant next to the Barcarena LNG (liquefied natural gas] terminal in Brazil
The commencement of the project marks a significant development in Brazil’s energy sector
with the plant set to become operational by August 2026
The EPC contract for the thermal plant was awarded to a consortium that includes Mitsubishi Power Americas and Andrade Gutierrez
The move follows the closure of a 15-year capacity reserve contract that New Fortress acquired from Denham Capital and CEIBA Energy in March 2024
The new power plant will provide capacity under a contract with the Brazilian Chamber of Electric Energy Commercialization and is a key component of NFE’s expansion in the region
Its strategy includes the completion of the Barcarena and Santa Catarina terminals in the first quarter of 2024
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The Barcarena LNG terminal will support 2.2GW of power capacity owned by NFE and provide natural gas to the Norsk Hydro Alunorte alumina refinery under a 15-year contract
further integrating the company’s operations within the region’s energy landscape
NFE managing director Andrew Dete stated: “We are very pleased to announce this EPC contract and the start of construction for our 1.6GW power plant in Barcarena
“We are grateful to our partners at Mitsubishi Power and Andrade Gutierrez for their swiftness and collaboration in placing this great project into construction
and we look forward to finalising the work over the next 24 months.”
Mitsubishi Power Americas LATAM commercial senior vice-president and regional leader Tim Shore stated: “This 1.6GW power plant is a historic project for Brazil
It will allow for an efficient energy transition and ensure the reliability of the national electrical system
“We are proud to participate together with Andrade Gutierrez to design and construct this important project to support NFE’s growth in Brazil.”
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the Barcarena terminal includes an offshore terminal and the Energos Celsius floating storage regasification unit
US natural gas company New Fortress Energy (NFE) has commenced operations at the Barcarena liquified natural gas (LNG) terminal in Pará
The terminal has a capacity of 6mtpa or 300 trillion British thermal units (TBtu)
It is expected to become the primary source of natural gas in Pará and the broader northern region of Brazil
This facility will supply LNG to multiple industrial clients including Norsk Hydro’s Alunorte refinery under a 15-year contract
NFE emphasised the environmental benefits of the terminal
stating that in addition to promoting industrial growth
the terminal will also help reduce emissions and pollution in the ecologically delicate Amazon region by offering an environmentally friendly substitute for oil-based fuels
The company is set to start delivering natural gas to the Alunorte refinery immediately
This is expected to cut the refinery’s CO₂ emissions by roughly 700,000 tonnes each year
aligning with Norsk Hydro’s objective to slash greenhouse gas emissions by 30% by 2030.
the Barcarena terminal will fuel NFE’s 630MW power plant
which is under construction adjacent to the terminal.
New Fortress Energy chairman and CEO Wes Edens said: “Our Barcarena complex is a great example of NFE’s fully integrated LNG-to-power business model
where our LNG import terminal provides a significant competitive advantage.
the state of Pará and Norsk Hydro in their decarbonisation efforts while growing energy supply and economic opportunity in the region.”
In November 2023, NFE and Pemex, the Mexican state-owned petroleum company, cancelled a joint venture to develop a deep-water natural gas project in Mexico
aimed to exploit the Lakach gas field in the Gulf of Mexico
estimated to hold 900 billion cubic feet of natural gas and located 90km from the port of Veracruz.
due to disagreements on the field’s development strategy and escalating costs
the project has been put on hold.
Pemex is now seeking new partners to advance the development of the Lakach field
energy infrastructure company New Fortress Energy (NFE) has executed definitive agreements with the Brazilian development bank Banco Nacional de Desenvolvimento Econômico e Social (BNDES) and funds managed by Lumina Capital Management and BTG Asset Management to fund up to $575 million in asset-based financing
these financings will be used to complete the construction of its 630 MW Barcarena power plant
which is approximately 37% completed pursuant to a fixed-price
date-certain EPC contract with Mitsubishi and Toyo Setal
located adjacent to NFE’s LNG import terminal at the mouth of the Amazon river
is said to be on schedule to commence operations in the third quarter of 2025 under a 25-year power purchase agreement (PPA) with several electricity distribution companies in Brazil
NFE said the company’s planned conversion of the Energos Celsius from an LNG carrier to a floating storage and regasification unit (FSRU) remains on schedule for November 2023 completion
before delivery and first gas to customers at the Barcarena import terminal beginning at year-end 2023
Energos Celsius is chartered by NFE from Energos Infrastructure on a long-term basis
commented: “This power plant will contribute to our portfolio of contracted
long-term cash flows in Barcarena beginning in the third quarter of 2025
This will follow contracted cash flows at our Barcarena terminal from Norsk Hydro and Gás do Pará that commence at year-end 2023.”
NFE also announced the execution of a definitive agreement to charter the FSRU Energos Winter from Brazilian state-owned oil and gas giant Petrobras starting in December 2023
this FSRU will be deployed to Terminal Gas Sul (TGS)
NFE’s newest LNG import terminal in Santa Catarina
which is expected to start commercial operations ahead of schedule in January 2024
The companies awarded by MEA get the opportunity to work closely together with a transnational team of Marine Energy experts on both the technical advancement of their technology
as well as the development of their commercial strategy and business plans
Each service offer is intended to put the company’s technology and business firmly on the […]
Singapore’s Seatrium has delivered the floating storage and regasification unit (FSRU) Energos Celsius to U.S
energy infrastructure company New Fortress Energy (NFE) for deployment at NFE’s completed LNG terminal in Barcarena
This is Seatrium’s fourth FSRU project for Brazil
for which the company said is “a testament to our commitment in supporting the development and growth of the country’s oil and gas industry.”
will have a nominal regasification capacity of 750 – 1,000 million standard cubic feet per day
it will be a part of NFE’s LNG terminal development at Barcarena
NFE executed definitive agreements with the Brazilian development bank Banco Nacional de Desenvolvimento Econômico e Social (BNDES) and funds managed by Lumina Capital Management and BTG Asset Management to fund up to $575 million in asset-based financing to complete the construction of its 630 MW Barcarena power plant
located adjacent to NFE’s LNG import terminal
NFE revealed that the construction of its Santa Catarina (TGS) terminal in Brazil is complete
and the company is looking forward to the arrival of the floating storage and regasification unit (FSRU) Energos Winter in January 2024
Hygo Energy Transition has executed a memorandum of understanding with Brazil’s Companhia de Gás do Pará to use the Baracena terminal
a joint venture between Golar and Stonepeak Infrastructure Partners
will supply natural gas and LNG to GdP once the negotiations are finalized
The company will utilize the Barcarena terminal
the only one permitted in this isolated region
Hygo and GdP will explore the potential in the local market
GdP is the regulated local distribution company (LDC) that has the exclusive rights to distribute natural gas in the state of Pará
The Barcarena terminal construction will start shortly with operations to commence in the first half of 2022
“The MOU is an important step towards introducing natural gas to the Para state
The Barcarena LNG terminal will transform the fuel supply in the region
and our clients will have an affordable solution to reduce their environmental footprint”
Hygo estimates the potential for replacing approximately 1.8 million tons of LNG equivalents per annum of LPG
The LNG demand for power generation is also significant
The company has secured 25-year PPAs for a 605MW power station in the region
which adds 0.6 mtpa of LNG demand to the Barcarena terminal
This power station will be capable of running with a blend of up to 50 per cent of Hydrogen
The company also expects to utilize the Barcarena LNG terminal to provide an LNG supply solution to the new regional power auction
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InfoAmazonia
Drug gangs threaten communities in Amazon ‘cocaine corridor’
African-descended and other traditional communities are caught in escalating violence from drug trafficking in Amazon “cocaine corridor.”
Maria talks fondly about the peaceful rural community where she grew up
she recalls playing games in the forest and in the river with the other kids
picking fresh açaí berries and foraging for nuts under towering trees
There were no “industrialized toys,” she says
with the arrival of a group of drug-trafficking outsiders
that reality has changed to nighttime gunshots
after a young man came to her home and threatened her
“He said that if I snitched and had them taken out of there
I would bleed — my whole family would,” she says
that she had told local authorities about the criminal group’s activities
she fled the community called Sítio Cupuaçu
a port city and today a major industrial hub close to where the Amazon River meets the Atlantic Ocean
we never heard of this drug business.” Her community is one of several quilombos — settlements formed by African people who escaped slavery in Brazil
and people of African descent — in the region
Maria says the people invading her community claim to have “permission” from the leader of a local branch of Brazil’s notorious Comando Vermelho (CV)
a drug gang with its main base more than 3,000 kilometers (1,864 miles) away in Rio de Janeiro
it has established itself as the dominant drug trafficking group in Pará
The gang used the forested community as a distribution and storage point for drugs like cocaine
burying larger quantities in the ground in case of police raids
the CV also engaged in small-scale land grabbing
clearing land to divide into plots to sell and illegal construction
wrecking the community’s rich natural habitats.
showing pictures of fallen forest and foliage on her smartphone
The northern port’s prime location near the mouth of the Amazon River offers better access to routes for both legal and illegal exports
Traffickers bring cocaine into the vast state of Pará — which at 1.2 million square kilometers (more than 460,000 square miles)
highway or clandestine flights that have proliferated with an uptick in illegal mining in Pará and across Brazil’s Amazon in recent years
gangsters divide cocaine cargoes to send to domestic markets in the state or across the country
or to Europe using Brazil’s expansive port structures
just 120 kilometers (75 miles) from the Atlantic Ocean
makes it ideal for exporters sending commodities to Europe
nearly 17 million tons of cargo such as soybeans
fertilizer and corn passed through the port
It is one of the so-called “Northern Arc” ports that gained prominence in Brazil over the last decade
which shorten maritime distances to key markets and therefore cut logistics costs
challenging the traditional dominance of São Paulo’s Santos port
But criminal organizations have also capitalized
Data obtained through a freedom of information request by InfoAmazonia to Brazil’s federal revenue agency show that
though experts have warned that seizures alone would not necessarily reflect an accurate picture
military police officers in Barcarena seized more than two tons of cocaine at a rural property a short drive from the port — and from Maria’s home — after exchanging gunfire with armed men who then fled into the nearby forest
it was the largest cocaine seizure in Pará’s history
federal authorities seized nearly three tons of cocaine hidden inside sacks of soybean meal at the port in a container destined for Portugal
It was one of the largest single cocaine busts ever recorded at a Brazilian port
Authorities have also seized cocaine hidden in shipments of timber
a mineral that has been increasingly coveted and extracted illegally in southern Pará in recent years by organized crime groups
ready to be exported or arriving from Vila do Conde to European ports in Portugal and Rotterdam
While São Paulo’s Santos port is still the main exit point for cocaine headed to Europe
inspections have stepped up in recent years
forcing criminal groups to seek other ports
“What we see is a very clear picture of the diversification of the use of Brazilian ports for the export of cocaine to Europe,” says Isabela Vianna Pinho
a guest sociology doctoral candidate at the Danish Institute for International Studies in Copenhagen and a member of the institute’s peace and conflict unit
“This is down to a series of complex factors,” she adds
[international drug trafficking] relies on people and personal arrangements.”
The seizures at Vila do Conde reflect part of a reconfiguration of drug routes and exit points for cocaine passing through Brazil on its way to Europe
as well as the growing importance of the Amazon as an international drug transit point
the volume of cocaine and other drugs passing through the Brazilian Amazon
whether destined for local markets or for export
with record production levels in Brazil’s neighbors Colombia
Approximately 2,000 tons of cocaine are produced annually
Just under half of the approximately 2,000 tons of cocaine produced annually passes through Brazil
roughly 40 percent of it through the Amazon region
head of the non-profit Brazilian Public Security Forum
“The turning point was in 2016,” he says, with the anti-aircraft machine gun murder of Jorge Rafaat
who controlled the supply of drugs on Brazil’s border with Paraguay
“The Comando Vermelho needed to adapt and was forced to find new routes
reactivating old contacts it had with Colombian drug lords.”
While Brazil’s Amazon has always been violent
The region offers various advantages to drug traffickers
and the possibility of exploiting various sectors of the economy in a much easier way than big cities,” de Lima says
because there’s less [state] supervision
Amazon Underworld joined local military police officers in Barcarena on an operation to clamp down on drug trafficking and other crimes
the city had seen an uptick in gang members released from prison heading there to set up local chapters of crime groups like the Comando Vermelho
Barcarena is home to several traditional rural quilombos like the one Maria fled
where officers say that gangsters from outside the city have sought to establish themselves
officers said they had raided a forest encampment set up by drug traffickers in the Itupanema Beach region of Barcarena
armed officers stormed a simple wooden house and arrested a man accused of rape who had fled from another city in Pará
the operation yielded no drug crime arrests
gang members would send the message round that police were out and therefore lay low
police in Barcarena arrested a 34-year-old man wanted for homicide
they also seized around 68,000 reais (equivalent to about US$13,600) in cash
planned attacks against security authorities during a wave of violence orchestrated by Comando Vermelho leaders last year in which at least seven police officers were killed
were arrested on charges of kidnapping and extorting drug traffickers
enrolled in a local program that provides protection and assistance for threatened activists in Pará
Maria laments the destruction of her community’s natural beauty and its social fabric
“It was so good,” Maria says of the community
“We always had issues with grileiros [large-scale land grabbers] trying to claim our land
but they always backed off eventually when we showed them our land titles.”
She says the drug gang has also co-opted some community members and young people with small gifts and promises of easy money
who was head of the local residents’ association
also fled the community after the gang threatened him with a gun at his house
We’re good people who want to raise our children well
Now the best way for us to raise our children is to send them outside of the community
and one of those later arrested in connection with the murder had already been charged with international drug trafficking
two Comando Vermelho gang members were also killed there
in a raid that happened during the wave of attacks on police officers
Maria said that the young man who threatened her at her home is the second in command in the area and handles sales transactions involving the clandestine constructions
The gangsters removed the community plaque
and one of the threats Maria received came after she told a prospective buyer that the area was a quilombo
and that his purchase might later be revoked
as those lands could qualify for government protection in the future
The person who came to her home “had a .38 revolver,” she says
Although they have not killed any community members
“They are always killing among themselves.”
The dynamics of “invasions,” as illegal land occupations run by organized crime groups are locally known
The Belém Metropolitan Region has some of the worst affordable housing provisions in Brazil
One resident who lives next to a Comando Vermelho invasion in Ananindeua
another city in the Belém Metropolitan Region
says local gang leaders decide what lands can be invaded and by whom
The tactic serves to further dominate and expand urban frontiers in a region where the Comando Vermelho’s only armed rivals are police and rogue police militias
faces a “tribunal,” which can result in their murder or expulsion from the invaded area without compensation
a researcher with the Brazilian Public Security Forum and an expert on organized crime in Pará
the growing criminal movement in Barcarena follows a statewide pattern
or “towers,” many recently released from prison or wanted by authorities
head to more remote locations outside of state capitals and city centers to avoid police detection
they need to maintain a relationship with drug trafficking
because they need to support themselves economically,” he says
Couto says the CV in Barcarena would almost certainly seek to expand its influence in the port region
just as the PCC did years ago in São Paulo’s Santos port
recruiting members within the state’s brutal prison system after Pará prisoners were jailed with CV members in federal prisons elsewhere in Brazil
CV gangsters from Pará have also increasingly fled to Rio de Janeiro
was killed in March in a police operation that left 13 dead in Complexo do Salgueiro
authorities raided properties connected to suspected lawyers of the group in the cities of Marabá and Castanhal
as well as several militia groups involving rogue police officers
What we see is the increasing suffocation of Barcarena’s traditional communities by both crime and heavy industry — the destruction of their traditional ways of life
several major industrial disasters since 2010 have seriously damaged local habitats on which traditional communities depended.
a Lebanese cargo ship headed for Venezuela with 5,000 cows and 700 tons of oil sank at the Vila do Conde port
killing most of cattle and releasing part of the oil into the river
Studies found the accident seriously depleted fishing stocks
“What we see is the increasing suffocation of Barcarena’s traditional communities by both crime and heavy industry — the destruction of their traditional ways of life,” says Cícero Pedrosa
a journalist and anthropologist who has studied Barcarena’s quilombos
“How can these families have a healthy life there?”
While Barcarena has emerged as a key drug trafficking hub
the CV has expanded even further in recent years into Pará’s vast interior
the state is home to seven of Brazil’s 30 most murderous municipalities
a hub of illegal mining activity and where the Munduruku Indigenous Territory is located
recorded a stunning 199 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants in 2021
the second-highest rate in Brazil and nine times the national average of 22 per 100,000
also suffer from high rates of environmental crime and land conflict
drug gangsters in Pará and across the Amazon increasingly look to reinvest or launder illicit profits through environmental crimes such as wildcat mining
which typically carry lesser penalties than drug crimes
A 2021 police operation called “Narcos Gold” confirmed that criminals used gold mines in Pará as landing strips for planes transporting drugs and as a front for money laundering
The main target of the operation, Heverton “Grota” Soares, held 18 prospecting permits for mining in Pará, which he used as a drug trafficking front, and is being investigated for drug trafficking, criminal organization, money laundering and homicide and has links to the PCC, according to media reports
Pará neither produces cocaine nor borders producer nations
According to state Public Security Secretary Ulame Machado
most cocaine and other drugs entering Pará
especially shipments bound for the port in Barcarena
come from the triple border with Peru and Colombia in neighboring Amazonas state and arrive by river
“Skunk,” a high-grade form of marijuana produced in Colombia
sells in Brazil for five times the price of traditional
weaker weed imports from Paraguay and enables criminal groups already using the Amazon River route to increase their profits
Reports of such shipments headed directly for Brazil’s largest drug markets
Machado mentioned a January seizure of 1.6 tons of cocaine and skunk hidden beneath 12 tons of prized pirarucu fish
a key region for the entry of drugs into Pará
drugs can be loaded into trucks and transported by road
especially the BR-163 and TransAmazonian highways
“you can deliver to the whole of Brazil,” including the Vila do Conde port
much less risky for them to use Barcarena port,” he says
“And at the same time their logistics are much easier
because you don’t have to cross the whole country to get to Santos.” Bolivian cocaine passing through Mato Grosso also enters southern Pará by road
An uptick in illegal mining in Pará in recent years
has increased the number of small plane flights
an expert witness with Brazil’s Federal Police
“And since these guys are already doing something illegal,” he adds
delivering cocaine “is not a huge step up for them.”
One of Brazil’s most experienced drug trafficking pilots, Silvio Berri Júnior, who worked for infamous Comando Vermelho leader Fernandinho Beira-Mar, held a gold prospecting claim in Pará and was arrested in 2020 on suspicion of working for mega trafficker Major Carvalho
Machado says Pará also serves as an important base for traffickers transporting drugs by air to other regions of Brazil
as the vast state is often used for refueling stops
which suffer some of the worst destruction from illegal mining in the Brazilian Amazon
also serve as logistics points for drug flights
“Such places are convenient [for drug traffickers] because they are out of the way of the public eye,” he adds
“There are no police cars patrolling there
In illegal mining towns and encampments across Pará
cocaine and crack fetch far more than the average street price — swaps of one gram of gold for one gram of cocaine are common
Machado says efforts are being made to stop the flow of cocaine into Pará
including the construction of civil police river bases in the Óbidos region and Abaetetuba
two key municipalities on the Amazon River drug route
as well as the recent construction of a base in Breves
in the Marajó Archipelago near the mouth of the Amazon
many harboring “clandestine” ports where drugs can be unloaded
Drug shipments pass by riverine communities and quilombos
and authorities often find stashes buried in the ground in and around Barcarena
Large quantities of drugs are spread out in smaller amounts in rural properties or warehouses that are cheaper and more protected because they are isolated
Legitimate exporters may unknowingly have their containers hacked and filled by specialized criminal gangs working at ports
a technique known as “rip on/rip off,” when official seals are broken and then reapplied
like the 2.75 tons of cocaine found hidden in soybean meal in 2022
often require the help of corrupt public officials
who officially requested Freitas’ removal from service
says international drug trafficking would be “impossible” without corrupt public agents
He notes that at the time the police lieutenant was arrested in Portugal
There are times when corrupt police know drugs are being kept somewhere
but they don’t say anything .They’ll just extort instead
Brasil described a complex picture of warehouses used in the Barcarena area to store cocaine
often with the tacit permission of corrupt local police
and front companies set up solely to give an air of legitimacy to the drug trade
“It is an institution to defend public order and morality,” he says of the police
“but unfortunately there are some who enter to steal
Investigations cited in local reports indicate that Freitas, the military police officer arrested in Portugal, worked for Portugal’s most powerful drug lord Ruben “Xuxas” Oliveira and Carvalho
the former military police major from Mato Grosso do Sul
then considered Brazil’s biggest independent drug trafficker
a fisherman beaches a rickety wooden boat at Itupanema
just as an intense Amazonian rainstorm begins
hulking cargo ships stacked with steel containers filled with tons of commodities headed for international markets sit anchored as the storm beats down
Maria understands little about the dynamics of international cocaine trafficking but knows the damage that has been inflicted on the forest community nearby where she was born and raised
“If one day we manage to get this land back
Amazon Underworld is a joint investigation of InfoAmazonia (Brazil)
Armando.Info (Venezuela) and La Liga Contra el Silencio (Colombia)
The work is carried out in collaboration with the Pulitzer Center’s Rainforest Investigations Network and financed by the Open Society Foundation
Commonwealth & Development Office and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN NL)
Δdocument.getElementById( "ak_js_1" ).setAttribute( "value"
a Colombian armed group that also operates in northern Ecuador
and the Ecuadorian gang Los Choneros have imposed a regime of terror in the Amazonian provinces of Sucumbíos and Orellana
although the alliances between them are unclear
One of the illegal activities that has grown the most […]
is also a source and transit point for illegally extracted jungle resources and narcotics
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Company turns in record results but still awaits start-up of its delayed first FLNG unit
US-listed New Fortress Energy has put its long-planned floating storage and regasification unit-based Barcarena LNG terminal into operation in Brazil.
Ahead of its year-end results on Thursday, New Fortress said the 6m tonnes per annum facility in Para state is now in operation with the 160,000-cbm Energos Celsius (built 2013) on site.
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This story is the fifth in a series reporting on the legacy
current status and likely future of bauxite mining in the Trombetas river basin and Amazon delta
Journalist Sue Branford and filmmaker Thaís Borges journeyed there in February
Their investigation of aluminum production is especially relevant now
as Brazil’s Bolsonaro administration pushes to open the Amazon’s Indigenous reserves and other protected areas to large-scale industrial mining
Brazil — Maria Socorro da Silva lives in the Amazon
but hasn’t heard birdsong in her backyard for many months
“Birds won’t eat them.” Then she points to the fruit on the ground
She is also president of the Association of Caboclos
Indigenous and Quilombolas da Amazônia (Cainquiama)
which represents thousands of the region’s forest dwellers
Barcarena was a peaceful fishing community
inhabited by traditional ribeirinho (riverine) families
But in the mid-1980s the international mining industry arrived and transformed the community into one of the Amazon’s main industrial and shipping hubs
while failing to consult inhabitants about the takeover
three immense mining processing plants crowd closely together in Barcarena: Hydro Alunorte
Norsk Hydro; the Norwegian-Japanese Albrás company
Brazil’s largest manufacturer of primary aluminum; and the French Imerys Rio Capim Caulim
a mineral used mostly in the making of paper and pottery
in a country whose government habitually favors industry over the rights of the people
with poorly upheld environmental regulation and enforcement
was a recipe for socio-environmental catastrophe
with leakage of toxic waste containment basins
with the discharge of huge amounts of soot from factory chimneys
The affected population says there were even more accidents in the same period; 27 in total
no one buys it because it’s all contaminated
How can I earn my living?” asks Raimundo Barros
from the quilombola community of São Sebastião do Burajuba (quilombolas are descendants of runaway slaves who established Brazilian quilombo communities in once remote rural areas
riverine families grew subsistence crops and earned money from selling fish and collecting forest products
from the Social Movement of Ribeirinhos (traditional riverine people) in the Pará River Basin
that represents about 10,000 local families
“Today [many] families can’t feed themselves from the environment they live in
and many go hungry when the açaí harvest ends
Fishermen find it hard to catch fish and shrimp in the river
they know they are eating contaminated fish,” Feitosa says
Local people told Mongabay that they have long lacked monetary and food security
while also suffering from social inequality and health problems
ever since the mining industry arrived and poisoned the air
and destroyed subsistence and commercial livelihoods
Barcarena today is among Pará state’s richest municipalities
But the wealth is very unevenly distributed
Away from the municipality’s center and a few wealthier areas
signs of extreme social deprivation are everywhere
lying in the shadow of the mining processing plants
while most people dispose of home waste in open-air garbage dumps
Barcarena’s central role in the manufacture or alumina and aluminum stems from the extremely rich reserves of bauxite found in the lower reaches of the Amazon River Basin
Mineração do Rio Norte (MRN) — originally set up by a Canadian mining company — opened its first bauxite mine beside the Trombetas River in 1979
That’s when the world’s big mining companies realized they could rely on this new
and began moving their polluting and energy-intensive alumina and aluminum industries to the remote Brazilian Amazon
and away from their developed home countries where they were already seeing environmental
The first mining giant to arrive in Barcarena in the early 1980s was Albrás — then a joint venture between Brazil’s gigantic state-owned mining company
Vale do Rio Doce (51% of investment capital)
an association of 32 Japanese firms (49% of capital)
The military dictatorship ruling Brazil at the time was keen for the companies to move in
so it paid for expensive infrastructure with public money
It built major public works projects including the Tucurui hydroelectric power station and mega-dam on the Tocantins River to provide cheap electricity for ore processing; along with the port of Vila do Conde in Barcarena; and a network of roads and river transport corridors supporting the mines
Albras, which, according to the Chamber of Electric Energy Commercialization (CCEE), a national body that oversees the sale of electricity, is Brazil’s largest individual energy consumer, began receiving subsidized electricity from the Tucuruí dam in 1984
the company paid just US$12 per megawatt/hour
The company says that it no longer receives a subsidy
market-based contract for the supply of electricity to its operations
The company does not receive a subsidy from the Brazilian government related to the purchase of electricity,” the company’s press office stated in a note sent to Mongabay shortly after this story was originally published.*
The generous subsidies handed out to the mining industry continued after Brazil’s return to civilian rule in 1985
and under successive conservative and progressive governments
and continues even now under President Jair Bolsonaro
their lives disrupted by large scale mining’s arrival
“The conflicts began with the expulsion of ribeirinhos from their land
to make way for the ports and industries [the government was] installing there
in a process that has carried on until today,” explains Feitosa
Other companies soon joined Albrás and Alunorte in Barcarena
About a hundred other smaller companies sprang up
providing services and manufacturing inputs to the mining processing facilities
One of the most serious in a long list of environmental accidents occurred in 2007, when the Imerys plant was responsible for a large spill of kaolin clay waste. According to a Dossier on Mining Disasters in Barcarena
about 200,000 cubic meters (52.8 million gallons) of the waste reportedly poured into the Curuperé and Dendê creeks
with some of the discharge reaching the Pará River
Dozens of families living in the industrial zone had to be rapidly evacuated to avert a far more serious disaster
a university lecturer who coordinates LAQUANAM (The Laboratory of Analytical and Environmental Chemistry) at the Federal University of Pará
“Sulphuric acid is used as a whitener in the processing of the kaolin,” she explained
the mineral releases heavy metals such as barium and cadmium
that are found in the waste that went into the watercourses used by the population.”
The company minimized the impact at the time
But Pereira pointed out that fish had previously all disappeared in 1996
when the company began discharging acid into the river locally
When Mongabay contacted Imerys about its reported involvement in 12 environmental accidents in Barcarena
it replied that “it acts within current Brazilian legislation
that demands rigid environmental controls and that it invested R$15 million (US$3.6 million) in the safety of its [waste] basins in 2109.” It did not answer questions about the possible presence of heavy metals in its tailings or reports that its basins were not made waterproof until 2007
The 2007 accident didn’t jeopardize the company’s close relationship with the authorities
headed by Ana Júlia Carepa from the left-of-center Workers’ Party (PT)
extended the company’s exemption from ICMS — a sort of value added tax on the circulation of merchandise and services — offering it to almost all of the firm’s operations
Other mining disasters followed. In 2009, a major spill occurred at the Alunorte plant, which, killed fish and damaged biodiversity along the Murucupi River, according to IBAMA
blamed “rain that occurs once in a thousand years.” IBAMA imposed three fines for damage caused to the river but by 2018 these fines had not been paid
LAQUANAM analyzed water from the Murucupi River after the accident and found toxic elements
while it’s not possible to link Alunorte to the presence of some of these heavy metals
the evidence against the company is stronger for other pollutants
particularly because high concentrations are found near the plant
a researcher with the Evandro Chagas Institute (IEC)
carried out a pilot study in Barcarena to assess air quality by looking at bioindicator flora — that is
plants that react in the presence of pollutants
the closer the plants were to the ore processing facilities
Pereira says that government failed to tackle the underlying problem
highlighted by the IEC study: “Neither Alunorte nor Imerys have been made to restore the biological life of the rivers they contaminate,” she said
cadmium and aluminum is still there [in the rivers] and people are still drinking this water and eating fish from it.”
São Sebastião do Burajuba and Vila Nova were the most severely affected
with residents alleging that the water in their creeks and artesian wells had been contaminated by toxic red mud flowing from the containment basin
Images of the flooded mining processing plant were splashed across the global press
A report made by the Evandro Chagas Institute
at the request of the Federal and State Public Ministries
which are bodies of independent litigators
concluded that the waste basin had overflowed
It based this judgement on two pieces of evidence: the level of aluminium in the rivers was 25 times above the legal limit; and an inspection had discovered two apparently clandestine pipes that were discharging untreated industrial waste directly into the water course
Alunorte rejected the conclusions of the studies
It said that the two pipes had not been used since the plant was built
though it admitted that during the flooding they had leaked rainwater
The company presented technical reports that found no evidence of an overflow
Just like Vale with respect to the earlier accident
of the kind that only occurs once in 10,000 years.” At the time of the accident
was still being tested and without an operational license
said that different authorities had inspected the plant 92 times in 2018 and had not produced evidence of an overflow
“We signed the deal so that the embargo over our operations would be lifted and because we are concerned about the wellbeing of our neighbors,” Carlos Eduardo Neves
backed the version given by the local operations director
He said: “Based on internal and external inspections
we have no reason to believe that there has been any leakage from the bauxite residue deposits at Alunorte.”
Molland also echoed the point made by Pereira that the location of the various processing plants
makes it difficult to attribute blame: “Alunorte is located in an industrial area
where for decades several large industries have been present
It is therefore often difficult to attribute substances found in the surrounding area.”
A Parliamentary Enquiry set up by the Pará State Legislative Assembly concluded that Alunorte was probably responsible for the 2018 accident
was for an investigation into the company’s failure to comply in Brazil with the “2014 Norwegian code of practice for corporate governance.” Other recommendations to Alunorte and to the Pará state government were for more effective measures for monitoring the safety of the plant
its environmental impact and the health of the affected populations
The controversy over this accident continues today. In a recent academic article about Barcarena
researcher Sabrina do Nascimento notes that the Pará state government’s environmental agency
did not regard DRS2 as a new structure but as an extension of the original one
it didn’t ask for a new Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) for DSR2
but allowed the company to use the original EIA
SEMAS did not comment on the need for a new EIA and said that its licensing process is continuous and conforms with legal requirements
Nascimento says that the situation radically changed over the years: Whereas in the 1980s Alunorte was producing around 800,000 tons of alumina per year
by 2018 its output had soared to around six million tons annually
She believes that it is the company’s failure to increase sufficiently its ability to handle toxic residue deposits
and the limited capacity of its water treatment stations
She notes that in 2003 the tailings dam overflowed twice
soon after the company had doubled its productive capacity
and that the 2009 disaster also occurred soon after a third expansion in productive capacity
“is evidence of the plant’s incapacity to treat and store tailings in the wake of an exorbitant growth in production.” Blaming the heavy rains — a so called “act of God” — begs the question of whether the waste catchment basins were adequate to safely store the waste from radically increased aluminum production
“The government signed our death sentence when it brought these companies here,” Socorro stated
She says that blood and hair tests have shown conclusively that local residents’ bodies are contaminated by lead and aluminum
neither the mining industry nor the government “is providing us with any way of removing these metals from our bodies.”
In 2019, the Evandro Chagas Institute published a study entitled “Human Blood Lead Levels and the First Evidence of Environmental Exposure to Industrial Pollutants in the Amazon” that examined levels of lead in communities close to the Barcarena plants
it found that in one of the communities the level of lead in adults was up to five times higher than the maximum level recommended by the World Health Organization
and in children it was up to eight times higher
told Mongabay that they had also found populations with high levels of cadmium and were currently investigating levels of manganese
Socorro and her husband believe they are living proof of this mining industry legacy
as they have both suffered seriously from cancer
was the premature death of their grandson who was born with deformities
Socorro blames mining industry contamination “from the water
the air and the soil.… They are taking away our wealth and leaving behind cancer to kill us,” she said
Few residents believe anything will change
“We are living through genocide legalized and supported by the state,” declares Paulo Feitosa
She asked Mongabay to help her publicize her appeal to the authorities:
I challenge you: You who are so in favor of mining
Banner image: Maria do Socorro da Silva touches a Burajuba tree
which the quilombo where she lives was named after
we will struggle because we don’t want to die!” Image by Thaís Borges – Feb/2020
* Update: This story upon publication said that “Albrás and Vale did not respond to requests for comment for this story.” However
Mongabay reached out to both companies for comment
and its remarks regarding subsidies have been added to this story
Albrás wrote: “The company clarifies that it manages effluents and waste disposal in strict compliance with environmental legislation and under the terms established in its operating licenses
Albrás has environmental control devices acting on its processes and their performance is reported periodically to the responsible environmental agency.” Vale did not respond to Mongabay’s request for comment
FEEDBACK: Use this form to send a message to the author of this post
In a judgment handed down by the Court of Rotterdam
Pogust Goodhead was successful in securing the jurisdiction of the Dutch courts in our claim against aluminium producer Norsk Hydro
and descendants of slaves affected by contaminated waters in Northern Brazil
The pollutive activities of Norsk Hydro at a site in Barcarena
Pará have caused untold damage to the environment and public health in the surrounding area
pain and weaknesses in their bodies as well as babies born with malformations
They have lost the water they once relied upon to fish
as well as their access to previous sources of income from selling products reared and sourced from the rivers
Our clients agree that this is a direct result of at least ten environmental disasters at the world’s largest aluminium refinery
which has seen pollutive waste being released across land and water
Norsk Hydro has refused to take full responsibility
and those affected have not had access to fair and full redress
they have taken their case to the Dutch courts
The Rotterdam District Court has ruled that the case can proceed to the merits phase
This is the third ruling of its kind in 2022 in cases led by Pogust Goodhead
with European courts becoming the gatekeepers of environmental damage caused by large corporations
is a limited liability company registered at Chamber of Commerce (no
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Norsk Hydro, a bauxite and aluminum mining and refining company also known as “Hydro” whose majority and controlling shareholder is the Norwegian government, has been accused by the Brazilian government of a toxic waste spill from holding basins at its Hydro Alunorte facility
is the largest aluminum refining plant in the world
The company denies responsibility for any spill
but says it is cooperating fully with officials
Also last week, Norsk Hydro was accused of possessing a “clandestine pipeline to discharge untreated effluent” into a set of Muripi River Springs in a report by the Evandro Chagas Institute of Brazil’s Ministry of Health
The Norwegian mining giant at first denied this accusation
there was a pipeline with a small flow of reddish water in the refinery area,” the company says
the company is making the necessary investigations to identify the origin and nature of the material
as well as carrying out the immediate sealing of this pipeline.”
High levels of lead, aluminum, sodium and other toxins have been detected in drinking water up to two kilometers away from the Norsk Hydro property, according to the Ministry of Health
likely due to caustic soda used to process bauxite
Pará State Attorney General Ricardo Negrini said in a Friday news conference there is “no doubt” a spill has occurred
but there is no data yet regarding the incident’s cause
After initial complaints were made by community residents about the spill
Hydro sent a note to its customers describing the episode as “rumor,” stating that “there were no leaks or ruptures” in the waste holding basin
The company also denied the spill on its website Sunday
“Internal and external inspections have not found proof of overflow and leakage from the bauxite residue deposits at Hydro Alunorte,” and that “The water has been collected
channeled and treated in the industrial effluent treatment station as normal.”
However, the company told BBC Brazil “it is committed to correct any problem that may have been caused by its operation,” adding that “Hydro Alunorte informs that it is immediately providing potable water to the communities of Vila Nova and Bom Futuro
The company undertakes to collaborate with the communities where the samples were collected by the Evandro Chagas Institute
to find permanent access solutions to drinking water
together with stakeholders.” The firm also said it would launch a task force to investigate
“The [local] population uses these waters [near the storage basins] for recreation
consumption and capture of fish,” so that proximity could lead to contamination of soils and bio-accumulation
Results of tests for toxins done on hair and skin of those living near the spill won’t be available for several weeks
Asked about the clandestine pipeline described by the health ministry report and its denial of the spill
the company said it is waiting to receive an official report before commenting further
The Norwegian government stated that it would not be able to respond to questions submitted by Mongabay in a timely manner for this story
the independent prosecutors of the Federal Public Ministry (MPF) and Pará state sent Norsk Hydro a document requesting immediate closure of the Norsk Hydro holding basin
there is a risk of a breach of the waste pond
which has raised fears of a tragedy similar to that of Mariana in 2015
when a toxic mud wave buried the village of Bento Rodrigues and spread down the Doce River for 500 miles to the Atlantic Ocean
a geographer and State University of Rio de Janeiro professor
told BBC Brazil that the dams at Mariana and Barcarena “have different natures,” with the Norsk Hydro holding basin presenting less of a threat
however have the] potential for contamination by tailings.”
BBC Brazil revealed that Hydro was the target of a series of denunciations by the Federal Public Ministry (MPF) of Pará
as well as almost 2,000 lawsuits for contamination of rivers and communities in Barcarena
the company has not paid fines set at R $17 million (US $5.27 million) to date
the leak at that time put the local Barcarena population at risk and generated “significant destruction of biodiversity.”
Memories of this previous trauma may have augmented concern expressed by local residents over the new spill
“This is not the first leak,” said Sandra Amorim
a resident of the São João quilombola (made up of former slave runaways)
a kilometer from the Norsk Hydro holding basin
and after the report they said it had a leak
They promised that they [would] start distributing drinking mineral water and food
we want this situation solved.” She added that there are currently “people with itchy bodies and people getting sick” in the community
There is as yet no official confirmation of contamination of local residents by the Evandro Chagas Institute
The Brazilian Bar Association in Pará (OAB-PA) said that in response to the discovery of the illegal pipeline that they will request the removal of the Secretary of Environment of Pará
and ask for judicial intervention in the Secretariat of Environment and Sustainability of Pará (SEMAS)
“It caused special indignation [when the health ministry found] a ‘clandestine’ drain
drained tailings when the rains intensified,” said OAB-PA
an estuarine region broken up by small rivers and islands
has seen its population grow at a rate three times faster than the rest of Brazil over the last 40 years
thanks to jobs generated by mining companies
But the province has experienced disorderly growth as it has become a major exporter of mineral commodities (bauxite
“The history of environmental accidents in Barcarena is impressive
an average of one per year,” Attorney General Bruno Valente
who signed a public civil action filed in 2016
“Sludge overflow from Hydro’s tailings basin affected a number of communities in 2009
and to date there has never been a compensation or fine payment,” he said
Some question whether the Norwegian government is acting fairly by causing environmental degradation in Brazil via its mining operations while simultaneously withholding funding due to its criticism of increased deforestation under the Temer government
Max Nathanson is a graduate student in the University of Oxford’s Department of International Development and a freelance photojournalist
See his work at maxnathanson.com and follow him on Twitter @TheMaxNathanson
Riverside communities in Barcarena have been enduring the negative effects of pollution caused by aluminium mining for many years
the affected population are forcing accountability on the European multinationals that are profiting from the pollution.
Around 11,000 families from the Brazilian state of Pará are seeking compensation for damage caused to the communities of Barcarena and Abaetetuba
Victims have been exposed to toxic residues from the processing of aluminium
which can cause health problems such as increased incidences of cancer
The Municipality of Barcarena and its neighbouring communities have suffered from several serious environmental disasters in the past 20 years as a direct consequence of the activities of aluminium producers.
and red mud contaminated the Murucupi river
The levels of aluminium on the water were up to 73 times higher than normal and the levels of other dangerous elements on the river
such as cadmium (linked to several diseases including cancer) and copper (which can cause the death of fish) were also higher than recommended by the Brazilian National Environmental Council – CONAMA.
a large amount of red sludge leaked once again
polluting several springs and rivers and putting residents at risk
This disaster was investigated by the Brazilian authorities who discovered three clandestine pipes
which were directly releasing toxic waste into nature.
Pogust Goodhead represents thousands of victims seeking justice for at least ten environmental disasters at the aluminium production and mining sites belonging to Norsk Hydro
Among the claimants are a significant number of Afro-Brazilian Quilombolas.
The Quilombolas are descendants of African slaves brought to Brazil
Many depend on the waterways of the Amazon and its tributaries
with 1,831 officially recognised Quilombo settlements in the Amazon
and 528 of those in the state of Pará.
The effects of the 10 pollutive incidents have resulted in many of the Indigenous communities and Quilombolas suffering from poor physical health
as well as taking away their income and access to food and clean water
The life they once had where they relied upon the rivers and wells for food
has gone and they have been left with no choice but to leave their homes
and weaknesses in their bodies as well as anxiety and panic attacks
In a judgment handed down by the Court of Rotterdam in November 2022
Pogust Goodhead was successful in securing the jurisdiction of the Dutch courts in the claim against Norsk Hydro.
The Rotterdam District Court ruled that the case can proceed into the merits phase
We represent a diverse range of clients against multi-national corporations
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Pogust Goodhead (a trading name of PGMBM Law Ltd) SRA License Number 512898.Pogust Goodhead is authorised and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority and complies with the Solicitors Code of Conduct, a copy of which can be located here
NEW YORK — New Fortress Energy’s (NFE) offshore Barcarena LNG terminal
at the entrance to the Amazon River in Pará
The development includes the Energos Celsius FSRU on site.
the terminal is the sole natural gas supply source in the state of Pará and Brazil’s North region
The complex will supply 6 MMt/year of LNG to various industrial customers
including Norsk Hydro’s Alunorte refinery
said to be the world’s largest alumina refinery in the world.
NFE claims it will cut the refinery’s annual CO2 emissions by about 700,000 metric tons annually
Barcarena will supply gas to NFE’s 630-MW power plant
currently under construction alongside the terminal
It should be ready for service during third-quarter 2025
NFE has further plans to use the infrastructure to expand its power complex by 1.6 GW under a New Power Project PPA
the company has secured financing commitments of $700 million for a second FLNG project at Altamira
and expects to complete construction early in 2026
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The death of a Brazilian community leader followed concerns about contaminated water around the aluminium plant but its Norwegian owners deny responsibility
the small communities near an industrial park in Barcarena
complained that a Norwegian-owned aluminium plant and other factories were contaminating their water
causing diarrhoea and vomiting and poisoning fish and local produce
In November they launched a $154m legal claim for environmental and moral damages against the Pará state government
the Hydro Alunorte alumina refinery and the Albras aluminium factory
The Norwegian company Norsk Hydro owns 92% of Hydro Alunorte and 51% of Albras
Community organisers began to receive threats
which brought floods of red-coloured water and mud
He was a leading member of a community group known as Cainquiama
said they believe his death was connected to their campaign
Norsk Hydro’s senior vice-president of media relations
said Nascimento’s death was “a tragic murder” and a matter for the police
“Hydro strongly disapproves any action of this nature and repudiates any type of association between its activities and actions against residents and communities of Barcarena,” Molland said
Police are not currently planning to question company staff
Nascimento’s killing comes just weeks after government researchers said they found evidence of a contaminating leak from the alumina refinery
“We have been threatened since we denounced the company,” said Bosco Martins Júnior, 42, a leader of Cainquiama, which stands for the Amazon Association of Mixed Race, Indigenous and Quilombolas (descendants of enslaved people)
After Martins Júnior reported threats in January
a state prosecutor requested protection for the group
but the then security secretary said the decision had to be made by the state council for the protection of human rights defenders
Norsk Hydro describes the Alunorte plant as the world’s largest alumina refinery. The company’s biggest shareholder, with 34%, is the Norwegian government, which contributes towards Brazil’s environmental protection and last year rebuked President Michel Temer over rising deforestation and moves to reduce protection
president of a commercial association in nearby Beja
said the area had suffered from pollution for years
the fruit are not the same as they were before,” he said
Local people have suffered health problems including diarrhoea
During heavy rains between 16 and 18 February
people living near the plant’s two reject basins reported floods of contaminated red water and mud
View image in fullscreenHeavy rains in February caused flooding of red water around the plant’s two reject basins
Photograph: Evandro Chagas Institute“It started to inundate the homes of people near the basin – the streams started to receive this red mud
the colour of the streams started to change
dead fish started appearing,” Cardoso said
The company denies it was responsible for the floods and said various factors could have caused long-term contamination in the area
But it has admitted making unauthorised discharges of rainwater that might have mixed with bauxite dust and caustic soda traces
On 17 February state government officials flew over the affected area and photographed areas within the company’s plant flooded with red water
a research institute in Belém that is part of the Brazil’s ministry of health
found areas inside and outside the plant flooded with the same coloured water
high levels of contamination – and a waste pipe that was not officially supposed to exist
“This clandestine pipeline emptied effluents from inside the company to the environment,” said Marcelo Lima
In a stream in the nearby community of Bom Futuro
Lima’s team found aluminium levels of 22mg per litre
well above Brazil’s legal limit of 0.1mg per litre
Around the clandestine waste pipe the level was nearly 6,000 mg per litre
“This is the Amazon – it is very sad to accept this pollution in our rivers,” said Lima
Courts ordered the company to reduce production by 50% and stop using one rejects basin which only had a licence for testing
Norsk Hydro’s chief financial officer and head of Brazilian operations
denied the company was responsible for any flooding or leaks
“We did not find any indication that anything has flown over or overflowed from the deposit areas,” he said
very difficult situation for the local population.”
View image in fullscreenNorsk Hydro said that internal flooding at its plant had caused ‘no significant environmental impact’
Photograph: Evandro Chagas InstituteMolland said some internal flooding was caused by a pump failure but all excess water was channelled towards the water treatment system
Hydro’s own testing in the area showed “no significant environmental impact”
Kallevik said the company was distributing water to local communities and had launched two investigations
Marcelo Lima’s team have since found another channel which he said allowed raw effluents to flow into a nearby river
Hydro said it made unauthorised discharges
through this channel on 17 February and periodically from 20-25 February
“Rainwater from the refinery area may contain bauxite dust and traces of caustic soda
but the water had not been in contact with the bauxite residue deposit areas,” it said
a professor of chemistry at the Federal University of Pará
found high levels of cadmium and aluminium
she conducted a study of subterranean water quality around Barcarena – where most people get their water from wells – and found it was unsuitable for consumption
“All of this is done in the name of progress
The original version of this article by Adriana Erthal Abdenur appeared on Climate Diplomacy
Environmental activists in Brazil are under attack. Last year—the worst year on record—57 of them were assassinated in Brazil, the most dangerous country for environmental activists in the world
The last few years have seen a dramatic uptick in killings of people who take a stand against companies and other actors that commit environmental crimes
Activists from indigenous communities are particularly at risk. Global Witness estimates that around 25 percent of the 207 activists killed in 2017 came from indigenous communities
Companies operating in the Barcarena area have been discharging heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, and aluminum into the river and releasing them into the air. The area has become so contaminated that, in many places, the soil is no longer safe for growing crops. A recent study supported by the Brazilian Ministry of Health
found that the contaminants in the Barcarena region are significantly above normal levels
and that heavy metals have leached through the soil
Due to the wells’ proximity to the groundwater
the area’s entire water supply may be contaminated
where natural resource exploitation has reached epic levels
many activists are targeted for fighting predatory and illegal extraction of wood; expansion of cattle farms; cultivation of soy
palm oil and eucalyptus; illegal mining; and
The impacts of the environmental harm vary
Although contamination by companies like Hydro Alunorte affect the entire population of Barcarena
In addition to the residents of the quilombos and the indigenous peoples
Most have stopped playing in the nearby igarapés
the small streams that split off the main rivers in the Amazon
Of the 57 environmental activists assassinated in Brazil in 2017
The new UN initiative has been framed as a policy aligned with UN Environment’s “Environmental Rights Initiative,” which promotes access to information on environmental rights and seeks to amplify the voices of environmental activists
Its main goal is to protect activists from intimidation
A rapid response mechanism is designed to address individual cases and to point to technical and legal solutions for the judiciary and enforcement community
so that they can strengthen the environmental rule of law
in order to prevent violence against activists
UN Environment will continue working with judges to develop and implement environmental constitutional provisions to help secure environmental rights
The Brazilian government is also taking steps to save lives by offering broader
federal-level protection for environmental defenders and communicators
Its program to protect environmental defenders was renamed “Program for Protection of Human Rights Defenders
Social Communicators and Environmentalists” and its budget was expanded
more streamlined program is easier to join
and it avoids removing activists from their home communities once they are threatened
It is a welcome step to end the massacres and unregulated exploitation of environmental resources
Large companies and the new government should now commit to tackling this issue and strengthen the institutions that protect land rights
By making specific commitments related to the UN initiative and setting the bar higher to defend and promote environmental rights
all UN member states can help support the UN initiative
all of these channels for environmental diplomacy will be effective only if the UN and member states are able and willing to turn promises into concrete reality
helping to prevent and address attacks and threats that target activists like Costa da Silva
Adriana Erthal Abdenur is Coordinator of the Peace & Security Division at Instituto Igarapé
Photo Credit: Bauxite waste in Barcarena, Pará, Brazil. February 2018. Courtesy of Pedrosa Neto/Amazônia Real at Jeso Carneiro
Developed by Vico Rock Media
Residents of unemployment-ridden Barcarena make a living out of the city’s landfill as informal waste pickers - Screenshot
While the 2015 disaster in southeastern Brazil
where two dams owned by Samarco collapsed and left a trail of over 300 miles of destruction and death
is considered the biggest environmental tragedy in the country’s history
the destruction is slowly killing communities and the environment over the course of many years
has recorded an average of one serious environmental incident every nine months for the last 15 years
around 26% of Barcarena’s population is less than 15 years old
Click the CC button in the player’s bottom toolbar for English subtitles and watch the full documentary below:
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provided it is not altered and proper credit is given
All original content produced and editorially authored by Brasil de Fato may be reproduced
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The Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) released
the update relative to year 2023 of the Metropolitan Areas and Urban Clusters
The update shows the creation of a new metropolitan area in the state of Goiás
the inclusion of a new municipality in the Metropolitan Area of Belém (PA) and the adequacy of the metropolitan areas of the state of Maranhão
the Metropolitan Area of the Federal District Surroundings was created
the Metropolitan Area of Grande Pedreiras (MA) was included as one of the metropolitan divisions in the state
the municipality of Barcarena (PA) became part of the Metropolitan Area of Belém/PA
The metropolitan Areas and Urban Clusters are divisions established by a complementary state law
as provided by the Federal Constitution of 1988
planning and execution of functions of public interest
The creation of the metropolitan Areas and Urban Clusters
as well as their modification and extinction
4 of the 27 Federation Units – States and the Federal District – do not have metropolitan Areas
“although the metropolitan areas are not territories defined by the IBGE
monitors changes and makes information available in an easy-to-access
public and free place.” He explains that “the IBGE recognizes that the metropolitan areas are territory divisions of public interest and tries to facilitate the research by a citizen who is interested in the topic which
instead of having to find information in different locations
finds it all compiled on the IBGE website.” He adds that the metropolitan areas are dynamic divisions and that data are expected to be as updated as possible
“The inclusion of municipalities in metropolitan areas occurs when a municipality joins a metropolitan are that already exists
as it is the case of Barcarena in relation to the Metropolitan Area of Belém in 2023
The exclusion/exit of a municipality from a metropolitan area is most common in municipalities located in the boundaries of the areas
The modification can result at the request of the municipality or as the result of a decision by the Legislative Assembly
it takes place when a metropolitan area is not active
as it is the case of the Metropolitan Area of Grande Pedreiras
The Metropolitan Area of the Federal District Surroundings
since it did not exist as a legal subdivision before
Ad there can also be the extinction of metropolitan areas that no longer make sense,” explained Paulo Wagner
“Metropolitan areas are more dynamic territory subdivisions
or modification of metropolitan areas from one year to the other,” he added
There have been no changes in the Integrated Development Areas in Brazil
in Urban Clusters and in the other Metropolitan Areas in Brazil
and most of them are located in the state of Santa Catarina (14)
followed by Paraíba (12) and São Paulo (9)
The states of São Paulo and Rio Grande do Sul were the Only ones with territories organized and Urban Clusters
being one in São Paulo and two in Rio Grande do Sul
The Integrated Development Areas (RIDEs) are defined as administrative regions encompassing different Federation Units
which lists the municipalities included in them
besides defining the structure of functioning and the interests of political and administrative units
The Metropolitan Areas and Urban Clusters are divisions established by a complementary state law
The creation of the Metropolitan Areas and Urban Clusters is a duty of the States
The update of these divisions encompasses changes of boundaries and nomenclatures observed in the Territorial Division of Brazil 2023 and changes in the composition due to modifications in legal or normative instruments under the responsibility of the agencies where the divisions are
The geographic Division that went through changes in 2023
by means of either law or the incorporation of new normative instruments
The Geographic Divisions updated on the IBGE Website and in the Geographic Reference Chart for the production
analysis and Dissemination of Statistics were Metropolitan Division
Metropolitan Category and Metropolitan Subcategory
© 2018 IBGE - Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística
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On April 25, Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff traveled to the northeastern city of Barcarena in Para state to attend the opening ceremony of the Miritituba-Barcarena port complex
The $320 million complex has two terminals — one in Miritituba on the Tapajos River and the other at the Port of Vila do Conde in Barcarena on the Para River
The terminals will handle grain shipments from Brazil's landlocked state of Mato Grosso and ease pressure on Brazil's overloaded Santos and Paranagua ports in the southeast
Mato Grosso's grain will first travel 965 kilometers (600 miles) by truck from the interior along highway BR-163 to Miritituba
the shipments will be offloaded onto barges and taken down the Tapajos River
the new route will cut transportation time by 20 percent and reduce costs substantially
The project is just one component of Brazil's broader push to open up the "northern exit" for grain shipments to Europe and Asia via the Atlantic Ocean.