Home Paddling Business Coalition Calls for Protection of the Piatúa River in Ecuador

Coalition Calls for Protection of the Piatúa River in Ecuador

The Piatúa River is under threat from a hydroelectric project

kayakers on the lower Piatua River. Photo by Jeremy Snyder
kayakers on the lower Piatua River. Photo by Jeremy Snyder

QUITO, ECUADOR — On November 26, a coalition of civil society organizations and law professors submitted an amicus brief to Ecuador’s Constitutional Court calling for the protection of the Piatúa River based on the Rights of Nature and Indigenous rights. The Piatúa River is under threat from a hydroelectric project that Ecuador’s government approved without the free, prior, and informed consent of Indigenous Kichwa communities. The project is suspended as the Constitutional Court reviews the case.

Kayakers on the lower Piatua River. | Photo by Jeremy Snyder

While all rivers and other ecosystems possess rights under Ecuador’s constitution, the amicus brief recommends urgent protections for rivers with outstanding natural and cultural values, including the Piatúa River. The amicus brief also highlights other deficiencies, errors, and omissions in the hydroelectric permitting process. Finally, the amicus brief supports Kichwa communities who assert violations of their own Indigenous rights.

“Ecuador’s government must begin to apply the Rights of Nature in practice, including by rejecting unnecessary dam projects that fragment ecosystems and negatively impact Indigenous territory,” said Constanza Prieto Figelist, the Latin American Lead at Earth Law Center, which is amongst the groups that submitted the amicus brief. “Today, our coalition presented a blueprint for Ecuador to enforce the rights of rivers in a strong and practical manner.”

The Piatúa is a wild and free-flowing river which drains out of the rugged Andean cloud forests of the Llanganates Mountains in the Ecuadorian Amazon. It provides an intact ecological corridor as it passes through montane rainforests down to the humid tropical rainforests of the Napo River basin. The Piatúa River is one of the last rivers in this region to avoid contamination from widespread deforestation, gold and gravel mining, dams, and other threats.

Species in this region are declining at breakneck speeds. The 2020 Living Planet Report found a 94% decline in monitored vertebrate populations between 1970-2016 for tropical subregions of the Americas, the most of any region in the world. The proposed hydroelectric project stands to exacerbate this trend.

Native Kichwa-speaking Indigenous families have inhabited the Piatúa watershed for centuries and lived in a traditional manner until the first road was opened to this area in 2007. These Indigenous communities have a deep respect and appreciation for the Piatúa River, which they rely upon for food and water and believe has special curative properties. They have always lived harmoniously with the river.

Pablo Shiguango, who was born and raised along the Piatúa River in the Kichwa community of San Juan de Piatúa, states “The Piatúa River has an incalculable value from the cultural perspective and cosmovision of our people. The Piatúa River provides life-bearing sustenance and well-being to our lives.”

The Piatúa River is also a destination for international paddle sports tourism. River enthusiasts share similar respect and values for the river and joined together with the Indigenous  communities to present the constitutional demand to uphold the rights of the river, including its right to flow freely. They share a mutual respect for the river.

“The Piatúa River in Ecuador offers one of the most special whitewater experiences that I have found. The Piatúa River attracts kayakers for its crystal-clear waters, incredible forests and bird life, and the friendly local communities who call this river home,” said Darcy Gaechter, a prolific kayaker and author of the book Amazon Woman.“The Piatúa deserves to be protected for the benefit of future generations and for nature itself.”

In 2008, Ecuador became the first country in the world to constitutionally recognize the Rights of Nature. However, Rights of Nature advocates argue that these rights are neither regularly nor adequately enforced. Ecuador’s government rarely considers the Rights of Nature in permitting decisions on projects that have major ecosystem impacts—mining, hydroelectric dams, new road projects, and so forth. While the courts have upheld Nature’s rights on occasion, such as a 2011 case ordering the restoration of the Vilcabamba River in the wake of a harmful road widening project, such rulings are sporadic and inconsistent.

“Our amicus brief provides Ecuador’s Constitutional Court with practical guidance to enforce the rights of rivers and all other ecosystems in practice,” said Monti Aguirre, the Latin American Coordinator at International Rivers. “The Rights of Nature can successfully work in practice if we develop clear standards for its enforcement, which our amicus brief aims to help achieve.”

Globally, the Rights of Nature are now recognized to some extent in over a dozen countries. This includes Colombia, which has issued a series of major court victories for the Rights of Nature, and even the United States, where a handful of Native American tribes and local communities have passed Rights of Nature laws, declarations, and resolutions. The Convention on Biological Diversity’s post-2020 global biodiversity framework also recently promoted the Rights of Nature in its updated zero draft, which is up for adoption in 2021.

Andres Charpentier on the Piatua River. | Photo by Jeremy Snyder

 


Earth Law Center (earthlawcenter.org) is a 501c3 organization that works to transform the law to recognize and protect nature’s inherent rights to exist, thrive and evolve. They recently released the first-ever law school coursebook on “Earth law,” which is an emerging body of ecocentric law, including the Rights of Nature.

International Rivers (internationalrivers.org) protects rivers and defends the rights of communities that depend on them. We seek a world where healthy rivers and the rights of local river communities are valued and protected. We envision a world where water and energy needs are met without degrading nature or increasing poverty, and where people have the right to participate in decisions that affect their lives.

Ecuadorian Rivers Institute (ecuadorianrivers.org) is a 501c3 organization that provides technical assistance and support to help protect and conserve unique watershed resources in Ecuador.

Fundación Río Napo (info@rionapo.org) works to preserve strategic, free-flowing watershed corridors in Ecuador to conserve freshwater biodiversity and ecological connectivity, and organizes river festival events to promote the value and importance of these resources for sustainable economic alternatives based on tourism.

The Great Lakes Environmental Law Center (glelc.org) is a Detroit (USA)-based nonprofit that offers community education, policy support, and various legal services to address environmental, resource, & energy issues affecting communities in and around Detroit, all over Michigan, and throughout the Great Lakes region.

Amazon Woman (amazonwoman.net) is building a community of writers who aspire to spread the love of wild places. We interact with our environment through river expeditions and then share these experiences through the written word. We believe that preserving wild places is key to our survival.

Bluegrass Wildwater Association (bluegrasswildwater.org) was formed in 1976 to promote the safe enjoyment, access, and conservation of wilderness waterways for human-powered watercraft, and is one of the oldest paddling organizations in the United States. The BWA has designated the Piatúa River as a natural wonder and supports measures for its permanent protection.

American Whitewater (americanwhitewater.org) was founded in 1954 to protect and restore America’s whitewater rivers and to enhance opportunities to enjoy them safely. AW is the primary advocate for the preservation and protection of whitewater rivers throughout the United States, and connects the interests of human-powered recreational river users with ecological and science-based data to keep remaining wild and free-flowing rivers intact, restore developed rivers to function and flourish, and ensure that the public has access to rivers for recreation, and that river enthusiasts are active and effective river advocates.

Sign this petition to urge the Ecuadorian government authorities to preserve the Piatúa River as an intact, free-flowing Andean Amazon tributary.

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