The corruption-ridden construction of Hidroituango, Colombia’s largest hydroelectric dam, is not just threatening to bankrupt Medellin; it has destroyed the livelihoods of tens of thousands of campesinos living in communities hours away from the city.
Yeison Ladeu is from Puerto Valdivia, one of the towns affected by the disastrous construction of the Hidroituango dam.
With tears in his eyes, the 33-year-old looked wearily and nostalgically at the Cauca River that had long provided for his family. He was staring at his childhood home across the river.
Just a few weeks prior he had learned that his family was going to have to vacate their home permanently after a catastrophic flood caused by the mismanagement of the project destroyed much of his community.
Floods were nothing new in Puerto Valdivia, a small riverside town five hours north of Medellin, the capital of the Antioquia province.
Beside the second largest river in Colombia, and what is widely considered its strongest, it was not uncommon for people who lived adjacent to the river to have water seep into their homes during rainy season. It was a risk worth taking for locals who over generations had learned to tame the river and extract wealth from it in the form of gold, fish, and even plaster.
But the water that stormed into Puerto Valdivia on the evening of March 12th, 2018 was untamable. It came from 38 kilometers upstream after a technical failure caused water to burst through the construction site of the Hidroituango Dam.
“Many members of this community are used to displacement as victims of the armed conflict,” Yeison said as he pointed at what remained of Puerto Valdivia. “But nothing has caused as big, and as permanent of a displacement as Hidroituango.”
The Dam
Nestled 110 km north of Medellin, in the middle of the Andes Mountains, the 5 billion dollar Hidroituango dam set to supply 17% of Colombia’s total energy supply was built with great expectations and even greater ambitions.
Conceptualized in 1969, by Jose Tejada— a nationally recognized civil engineer— the dam was promoted by supporters as an engineering and political feat for Antioquia, one of Colombia’s wealthiest, but also most war-torn regions.
With the government of Antioquia and Medellin public utilities company EPM as its primary shareholders, Hidroituango was more than an energy project, it was a source of pride and achievement for the regional elite.
The region surrounding the Hidroituango dam has been traditionally violent as different sets of left wing guerrilla and right wing paramilitary groups have fought to control its towns and the lucrative cocaine trade that sustains them.
The dam’s reservoir itself is thought to cover dozens of mass graves. More than 60 massacres that left more than 370 victims have been registered in the 11 municipalities directly affected by Hidroituango’s construction.
Experts estimate that there were 3,500 murders, 600 forced disappearances, and 110,000 displacements in the region between 1990 and 2016. Financed with public money, Hidroituango was marketed by the government as a step forward from that violence—a development project that was supposed to bring peace and prosperity to a region that has never known it.
However, since construction began in 2010 with the blessing of former President Alvaro Uribe, the project built by EPM has been dogged by technical failures and delays. These complications have caused immeasurable environment damage, forced displacements, and the endangerment of the region’s finances. Such difficulties have only added strength to the calls to halt and even dismantle the project by prominent activist groups like Rios Vivos.
The evacuation of 2500 families from Puerto Valdivia and the destruction of 59 homes, two schools, a health care center, and the town’s landmark—the Simon Bolivar Bridge—the first bridge to connect Medellin with the Atlantic Coast, by the flood on May 12th was simply a taste of what could happen if the entire project were to collapse. If Hidroituango breaks, it will endanger the lives of 120,000 people who live in the Cauca River Basin .
But in Puerto Valdivia the damage is done.
No Return
Four hundred families, like Yeison’s, are never going to be able to return to their homes. Because they live in the flood zone, municipality workers on behalf of EPM placed stickers with the words “No Return” on the front doors of their homes—if they still existed.
These families remain in limbo, waiting for compensation by EPM or relocation by the state government. The government has released multiple plans and projects, but nothing concrete. For now, their focus is repopulating Puerto Valdivia.
In November, some 1,700 of the 2,500 families evacuated from the port town in May and housed in temporary EPM shelters were allowed to return by the municipality only to find they lost half their town.
The town’s main square, where the church still stands, can no longer be used. The homes and stores that surround the house of prayer are scheduled for demolition. The church will be left standing—but only as a monument. A major point of reunion and community-building is gone. The flood washed it away six months earlier.
Around the church and in Remolino, a neighborhood that the Simon Bolivar Bridge used to connect to the town square, there were no people in sight; only their wet and scattered belongings were still on the street six months after the disaster. Occasionally community members emptying their homes would express their dismay and anger at what had happened to them.
“Look at what happened to this community!” a woman yelled in frustration as she was carrying boxes out of her house after a No Return sticker was placed on the front door. “We used to live here happily! We were so happy! Now look at how sad this town is! Look at what EPM did!”
Businesses are selling a fraction of what they used to, cantinas for coca farmers visiting the town on weekends have closed, and entire blocks are empty. The taxi drivers and store owners who were able to survive in Puerto Valdivia are making a fraction of what they once made. There is no one to drive or to sell to. Puerto Valdivia is by all definitions a ghost town.
Since the flood, Puerto Valdivia looks more like a collection of abandoned buildings amidst abundant green vegetation and colorful fruit trees than a place where people live. The dam shoved the sounds of boom boxes blasting tropicales and vallenatos and the sound of mototaxis honking at familiar faces to history. What is left is desertion.
Despite EPM giving the majority of the community authorization to return, few wanted to. The town was destroyed. But Yeison returned, and he returned willingly, out of loyalty and devotion to a community he had spent years serving as a member of its Community Action Board and as the administrator of the Community Aqueduct.
Loss of tradition
The threat continues
“People used to marvel at the color and joy that thrived in this community. But now what we see is psychological damage,” Yeison lamented. “Those who have returned to Puerto Valdivia live in fear daily. A huge segment of the population is missing or diminished because of fears of new flooding due to an avalanche or a technical failure at the dam.”
And that’s because Puerto Valdivia and its surrounding communities remain on red-alert.
EPM has not been able to guarantee that another flash flood will never happen again. Such fears became yet another reality in February when the Cauca River dried up and killed some 65,000 endemic fish after EPM made an emergency decision to close the dam’s engine room tunnel to prevent the entire dam’s collapse.
“But rather than protect the residents of Puerto Valdivia, EPM has chosen to cut costs,” Leo Rodriguez, 38, a local resident, who spent several months living in an EPM-funded shelter, said.
Housing community members was expensive. It cost a minimum of $300 (900,000 pesos) per person a month. But rather than pay the full housing costs of those evacuated from Puerto Valdivia, EPM decided to send people home and pay victims as family-units instead of as individuals at $350 (1,100,000 pesos) a month. This decision reduced expenses and helped struggling business owners gain some of their clientele back. But at great risk.
Local resident Leo Rodriguez
Economic woes
As a law student about to finish his degree, Yeison could easily find employment elsewhere. However, the call to fight for his community’s survival is greater—and he does it with little trust and a lot of uncertainty.
“What happens to the dreams of all of the people who dreamed of seeing this community grow and prosper?” he asked. How am I supposed to motivate the people who trusted me as a leader? I don’t want to leave this community. I don’t want to stop working for this community, but what future is there here?”
Today, Yeison leads a board of business owners, like himself, in advocating for “full and comprehensive reparations” for the entirety of Puerto Valdivia and not just for those who lost their homes on May 12th. He has yet to be granted a meeting with EPM officials. Still, he refuses to quit.
“Before this disaster we were used to living dignified lives,” Yeison exclaimed. “We never asked for anything from anyone. We have always been autonomous. If you come to Puerto Valdivia you won’t see beggars. What you will find are people ready and willing to work. We want our dignity back.”
Since the construction of the dam began, and especially after the May12th flood, Yeison has seen his family’s business of extracting plaster from the river severely weakened.
“The water that flows from the river is too clean these days,” he explained. “The cleanliness of the water doesn’t allow for sand to deposit on the banks so we can gather it and use it for plaster. Instead, that material stays up at the dam site leaving hardly any for us to extract. We used to have 30 people who worked for us. Now we have fewer than 10.”
But the changes in the ecosystem are not the only cause of unemployment in the region so are EPM’s policies.
Before the technical failures at the dam, Leo Rodriguez was a fisherman and an artisanal miner. However, because of the ongoing emergency at Hidroituango, EPM prohibited mining and fishing on the river and Leo lost his job.
“We were pulled from that river like dogs,” he lamented. “EPM said the dam was going to bring jobs and security, but all it has brought is unemployment and fear.”
“EPM may be one of the largest multinationals in Colombia, but they are also the country’s biggest thief,” he added.
Upon losing his job, Leo took a job at the dam site—that was all that was left.