Jatobá Hydroelectric Power Plant


The Jatobá Hydroelectric Power Plant is a planned hydroelectric power plant and dam on the Tapajós river in the state of Pará, Brazil.
As of 2017 the project was suspended.

Location

The Jatobá Hydroelectric Power Plant will be built on the Tapajós river in the state of Pará, the second largest hydroelectric plant in the state.
The reservoir will cover.
The plant and reservoir will affect the municipalities of Itaituba and Jacareacanga.
The dam will be just upstream from the Sawré Muybu Indigenous Territory.
It would flood large areas of Munduruku territory, and of land used by traditional ribeirinhos communities.
The official estimate is that 1,303 people will be affected by the reservoir.
The plant will be part of the proposed Tapajós hydroelectric complex on the Tapajos and Jamanxim rivers.
Others are the São Luiz do Tapajós, Cachoeira dos Patos, Jamanxim and Cachoeira do Cai dams, all under study, as well as the less advanced proposals for the Chacorão and Jardim do Ouro.
The São Luiz do Tapajós, Jatobá and Chacorão dams on the Tapajós would together flood, including parts of the Amazônia and Juruena national parks and the Itaituba I and Itaituba II national forests.

Technical

The dam will be long, with a maximum height of.
The reservoir will have an area of.
Excluding the existing river area, will be newly flooded land.
Water levels will be upstream and downstream.
The hydraulic head will be.
The plant will have installed capacity of.
The plant will have 40 bulb turbines, each with capacity of.
Assured energy will be.
Annual output will be.
The cost is estimated at US$4.4 billion.

Planning process

Provisional measure 558 of 5 January 2012, which changed the boundaries of various conservation units in the Amazon region, removed an area of about from the Tapajós Environmental Protection Area due to the planned Jatobá Hydroelectric Power Plant.
The measure reduced the size of other conservation units including the Amazônia National Park, and the Itaituba I, Itaituba II and Crepori national forests.
The Federal Prosecutor General filed a lawsuit in February 2012 challenging the constitutionality of the measure.
Law 12.678 of 25 June 2012 confirmed provisional measure 558.
A "platform" approach is proposed for construction to minimise environmental impact.
There would be no access roads, and workers would be taken to the site by helicopter.
After construction is complete the site would be regenerated.
The dam and plant will be built by the Grupo de Estudo Tapajós consortium, composed of Eletrobras, Eletronorte, Électricité de France, Camargo Corrêa, CEMIG, Copel, Engie, Enersis and Neoenergia.
As of 2017 construction was suspended.