South America Blog
About this blog
Wayne Bernhardson is the author of Moon Handbooks to Buenos Aires, Chile, Argentina, and Patagonia. Here he shares his vast knowledge of South America and its people.
Recent Posts
- Buenos Aires with Bronchitis
- The Panorama of Santa Lucía de Santiago
- An App for Recoleta; An Elevation for Aconcagua
- Behind the Buenos Aires Transport Reform (Redux)
- Are Argentines "Enormous Dorks?" Behind the Buenos Aires Transport Reform
- The Great Patagonian Ice Theft
- On Wednesday: Around the Southern Cone
- Argentine Trains: Off the Rails, So to Speak
- Book Review: The Practical Nomad
- Torres del Paine: The Final Word for 2012?
- Subte's Soaring Fares; Airports & Ashes
- Paine's Road Back; Chiloé Concerns
- Tango Mexicano, ¿Rancheras Argentinas?
- Book Review: Malbec Conquers the Wine World
- Paine Catches Fire: the Aftermath

Parque Pumalín - Saved by the Volcano!
The 2008 eruption of Volcán Chaitén, about which I have written several blog entries, now turns out to have had positive as well as negative consequences. For years, environmental philanthropist Doug Tompkins has been arguing that building a road through undeveloped parts of Tompkins’s Parque Pumalín, with attendant clear-cutting to allow for power lines from proposed hydroelectric dams in northern Chilean Patagonia, would be an environmental disaster. Now, it seems, the Chilean government concurs with Tompkins that a coastal route is preferable to an inland route through the heart of Tompkins’s properties (click on the map to see more detail).
That’s because the authorities have decided that the new route, which will now involve two ferries, cannot pass as close to the volcano as the present road does. As the town of Chaitén relocates to the northwest of its current site, it too will be beyond the volcano’s reach. Their reasoning may not be the same as Tompkins’s - the power lines are not likely to disappear from the proposal - but Pumalín should remain relatively untouched. On the other hand, the government’s move eliminates one of the objections to building the massive hydroelectric projects on the Río Baker and the Río Pascua, with all that energy to be shifted to power-hungry metropolitan Santiago. In all likelihood, this is not the end of the story of native forest conservation in northern Chilean Patagonia, but it's nevertheless a positive development.
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