Brazil’s hydropower faces risk from drying river basins
- September 14, 2024
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Brazil’s hydropower faces risk from drying river basins
Sub: Geo
Sec: Mapping
Context:
- Soil moisture in Brazil’s main hydropower river basins has hit nearly two-decade lows.
- This drought threatens long-term impacts on Brazil’s energy sector, even after the rains return.
Details:
- Hydropower typically generates about two-thirds of Brazil’s electricity.
- Years of weak rainfall have hurt the sector, leading to higher energy costs and inflation.
- Key Affected Areas:
- The Paranaiba, Grande and Tocantins hydroelectric basins, stretching across the southeast, centre-west and north Brazil, make up a large part of the sector’s capacity, and they are experiencing the lowest September soil moisture levels since 2005.
- A decade of below-average rainfall, with only one year above the long-term average.
- Run-of-river generators are the worst hit, including the partial shutdown of the Santo Antonio plant.
- Mitigating Factors:
- Growing wind and solar capacity offers some relief, but transmission bottlenecks limit their use.
- Current reservoir levels (53% capacity) are better than during the 2021 water crisis (16%).
- Economic Impact:
- Electricity prices are expected to remain high until abundant rains arrive.
- Power rates are likely to stay at top ‘red flag’ levels through year-end.
- This could add 14 to 32 basis points to 2024 inflation forecasts.
In the news | Description |
Santo Antônio Dam |
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Tocantins basin |
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Paranaíba River |
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About Brazil:
Geography |
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Bordering Countries |
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Population |
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Economy |
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Natural Resources |
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Source: Reuters