Pm. Fearnside, Greenhouse gas emissions from a hydroelectric reservoir (Brazil's Tucurui Dam) and the energy policy implications, WATER A S P, 133(1-4), 2002, pp. 69-96
Greenhouse gas emissions from hydroelectric dams are often portrayed as non
existent by the hydropower industry, and have been largely ignored in globa
l calculations of emissions from land-use change. Brazil's Tucurui Dam prov
ides an example with important lessons for policy debates on Amazonian deve
lopment and on how to assess the global warming impact of different energy
options. Tucurui is better from the point of view of power density, and hen
ce greenhouse gas emissions per unit of electricity, than both the average
for existing dams in Amazonia and the planned dams that, if all built, woul
d flood 3% of Brazil's Amazon forest. Tucurui's emission of greenhouse gase
s in 1990 is equivalent to 7.0-10.1 x 10(6) tons of CO2-equivalent carbon,
an amount substantially greater than the fossil fuel emission of Brazil's b
iggest city, Sao Paulo. Emissions need to be properly weighed in decisions
on dam construction. Although many proposed dams in Amazonia are expected t
o have positive balances as compared to fossil fuels, substantial emissions
indicated by the present study reduce the benefits often attributed to the
planned dams.