Berliner Boersenzeitung - Rio launches clean-up of gorgeous, filthy bay -- again

EUR -
AED 4.326546
AFN 75.93488
ALL 95.560713
AMD 440.716876
ANG 2.108277
AOA 1081.298091
ARS 1597.513603
AUD 1.64534
AWG 2.120192
AZN 1.998086
BAM 1.954579
BBD 2.371119
BDT 144.740201
BGN 1.964831
BHD 0.444122
BIF 3493.604602
BMD 1.177884
BND 1.497471
BOB 8.134918
BRL 5.885414
BSD 1.177265
BTN 109.844851
BWP 15.7952
BYN 3.351606
BYR 23086.53075
BZD 2.367731
CAD 1.614161
CDF 2716.200921
CHF 0.92345
CLF 0.026543
CLP 1044.645792
CNY 8.034997
CNH 8.036162
COP 4257.544972
CRC 539.063268
CUC 1.177884
CUP 31.213932
CVE 110.544405
CZK 24.329432
DJF 209.333917
DKK 7.473145
DOP 70.673296
DZD 155.771697
EGP 60.972116
ERN 17.668263
ETB 183.818376
FJD 2.609484
FKP 0.868074
GBP 0.870568
GEL 3.167857
GGP 0.868074
GHS 13.02153
GIP 0.868074
GMD 85.985119
GNF 10341.823051
GTQ 9.003376
GYD 246.316136
HKD 9.217427
HNL 31.274464
HRK 7.534685
HTG 154.093744
HUF 364.649985
IDR 20212.964402
ILS 3.530272
IMP 0.868074
INR 109.570736
IQD 1542.236625
IRR 1555985.057295
ISK 143.996593
JEP 0.868074
JMD 185.903873
JOD 0.835136
JPY 187.490308
KES 152.123519
KGS 103.005735
KHR 4729.20477
KMF 493.533215
KPW 1060.10731
KRW 1742.591332
KWD 0.363383
KYD 0.981091
KZT 555.285492
LAK 25973.775201
LBP 105422.94642
LKR 371.837728
LRD 216.614689
LSL 19.307221
LTL 3.477986
LVL 0.71249
LYD 7.44638
MAD 10.878851
MDL 20.119518
MGA 4887.946691
MKD 61.662181
MMK 2473.988538
MNT 4230.064844
MOP 9.490072
MRU 46.877916
MUR 54.430137
MVR 18.198101
MWK 2045.390612
MXN 20.335703
MYR 4.657292
MZN 75.331603
NAD 19.30714
NGN 1579.743074
NIO 43.322938
NOK 11.030121
NPR 175.751215
NZD 2.000901
OMR 0.452922
PAB 1.177265
PEN 4.05037
PGK 5.101835
PHP 70.722557
PKR 328.30622
PLN 4.241119
PYG 7504.31235
QAR 4.291883
RON 5.097413
RSD 117.344359
RUB 89.959411
RWF 1724.130322
SAR 4.418648
SBD 9.480299
SCR 16.336103
SDG 707.908703
SEK 10.835404
SGD 1.499399
SHP 0.87941
SLE 29.034962
SLL 24699.638676
SOS 672.782595
SRD 44.172997
STD 24379.825255
STN 24.484705
SVC 10.300609
SYP 130.188206
SZL 19.302942
THB 37.732369
TJS 11.166272
TMT 4.128484
TND 3.418664
TOP 2.836063
TRY 52.725054
TTD 7.997005
TWD 37.190286
TZS 3071.335632
UAH 51.438287
UGX 4350.282549
USD 1.177884
UYU 46.990846
UZS 14321.114953
VES 563.008481
VND 31017.814158
VUV 139.541959
WST 3.199075
XAF 655.550286
XAG 0.01502
XAU 0.000246
XCD 3.183291
XCG 2.121684
XDR 0.813879
XOF 655.541943
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.047667
ZAR 19.337714
ZMK 10602.374585
ZMW 22.514936
ZWL 379.278239
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RYCEF

    -0.8000

    16.8

    -4.76%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    22.68

    -0.13%

  • BCC

    0.0800

    78.99

    +0.1%

  • GSK

    -0.4300

    57.38

    -0.75%

  • RIO

    1.3400

    99.9

    +1.34%

  • NGG

    -0.4800

    87.38

    -0.55%

  • AZN

    -0.4900

    200.72

    -0.24%

  • BCE

    0.3550

    24.175

    +1.47%

  • BTI

    -0.4100

    56.27

    -0.73%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    15.7

    +0.7%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.88

    0%

  • RELX

    0.6900

    36.37

    +1.9%

  • CMSD

    0.0050

    23.035

    +0.02%

  • BP

    1.5900

    47.71

    +3.33%

Rio launches clean-up of gorgeous, filthy bay -- again
Rio launches clean-up of gorgeous, filthy bay -- again

Rio launches clean-up of gorgeous, filthy bay -- again

Cold beer in hand, the sun shining, Edson Rocha seems to have everything for a beautiful day at the beach.

Text size:

In front of him, emerald hills cascade into Rio de Janeiro's Guanabara Bay; to the right is the Brazilian seaside city's majestic Sugarloaf Mountain; above, the iconic Christ the Redeemer statue outstretches his arms, as if to embrace the perfect beauty of it all.

Perfect except for one detail: the water in the bay is a foul-smelling stew of raw sewage, industrial pollution and trash.

Rocha, a 46-year-old oil worker, would love to take a swim.

"But then you have to go straight to the shower and scrub for 10 minutes to try to wash the pollution off," he says with a laugh, sitting meters (yards) from a river of sewage emptying into the bay.

The heart of Rio, Guanabara Bay is one of the most postcard-gorgeous spots on Earth.

But urban sprawl has blighted the landscape, and bathers prefer less-polluted beaches like Copacabana, on Rio's Atlantic coast.

Home to 12.5 million people, the bay's watershed system has long been a dumping ground for garbage, toxic chemicals and sewage, 54.3 percent of which goes untreated.

Now, after decades of failed fixes, Rio state authorities say they have a solution.

Last year, they privatized tottering water and sanitation service Cedae, selling the operating rights for Rio city and 26 other municipalities to company Aguas do Rio.

The new operator promises to invest billions to do what no one has managed yet: clean up Guanabara Bay.

- 'Graveyard of failed projects' -

Aguas do Rio, which took over in November, plans to invest 2.7 billion reais ($570 million) over five years fixing broken waste-treatment systems and cleaning sewage from the bay.

The company, a subsidiary of sanitation group Aegea, has promised total investments of 24.4 billion reais across its 35-year contract to bring the sewage-treatment rate to 90 percent.

"I have no doubt people will start swimming again in the bay," says chief executive Alexandre Bianchini.

Locals are skeptical, given the history of failed plans to save the bay.

In 1994, Rio state launched a clean-up program with international funds, spending $1.2 billion on sewage treatment plants -- but largely failed to finish the pipes connecting them to residents.

Then came Rio's rush to host the 2016 Olympics. As international media ran embarrassing images of the polluted bay, Rio earmarked nearly $1 billion to clean it.

But the state declared insolvency weeks from the Games. It never came close to fulfilling its promise to bring the sewage-treatment rate to 80 percent.

"Guanabara Bay has become a graveyard of failed projects," says ecologist Sergio Ricardo, a co-founder of environmental group Baia Viva.

- Fishermen without fish -

On a mucky, fetid bank off the bay's northwest corner, fisherman Gilciney Gomes brandishes two of the myriad plastic bottles he has pulled from the water.

"Am I supposed to feed this to my family?" says Gomes, head of the Caxias Fishing Colony, a fishermen's association.

Gomes lives near the Jardim Gramacho landfill at the bay's edge, once the biggest open-air dump in Latin America. Officially closed in 2012, it continues leaching a toxic slurry into the bay, environmentalists say. An illegal dump nearby still receives trash by the truckload.

The bay's banks here are clogged with plastic, diapers, clothing, tires, furniture and appliances.

Major chemical and oil companies operate facilities nearby that have leaked toxic industrial pollution into the water, say fishermen and activists.

Gomes, a father of four, says there are no longer enough fish and crabs in this region of the bay for fishermen to survive.

"We've become garbage-diggers," says Gomes, who started working as a nine-year-old boy digging garbage at the dump and is now back to selling recyclable trash at age 61.

Biologist Mario Moscatelli, who runs a program to replant mangrove forests at the former dump site, calls Guanabara Bay "a microcosm of how environmental problems are managed in Brazil."

"This disaster has been created by disorganized urban growth, booming slums, lack of public-housing policy for the poor, lack of universal access to the sewage system. And the environment always pays for it," he says.

Still, he says, he is willing to give Aguas do Rio a shot.

"We gave the state 50 years to make this mess. We can give the company five."

(O.Joost--BBZ)