
Argentina's President Mauricio
Macri (L) poses for photos with a worker at the construction site of an
Argentina-China joint hydropower megaproject where two hydroelectric dams,
Condor Cliff and La Barrancosa, are being erected along the Santa Cruz River in
southern Argentina to boost national energy output.
Argentina's
President Mauricio Macri said a joint Argentina-China hydropower megaproject is
"highly important" and "emblematic" in terms of renewable
energy and economic development.
Engineering
and construction giant China Gezhouba Group Company (CGGC) is spearheading the
hydropower project, which is expected to create 5,000 direct and 15,000
indirect jobs once complete.
Macri made
the remarks during his first official visit to the construction site of the
project, where two hydroelectric dams, Condor Cliff and La Barrancosa, are
being erected along the Santa Cruz River in southern Argentina to boost
national energy output.
The visit was
part of a wider swing through southern Argentina's Patagonian provinces of
Tierra del Fuego, Santa Cruz and Chubut, where the president is to review the
progress of several public works, including the dams, which are expected to
expand Argentina's electric energy capacity by more than 6 percent.
"I am
pleased to be here right now because these dams represent a lot to Santa Cruz.
It is a highly important emblematic project, and I think it is a relief to all
residents of Santa Cruz to see the companies pick up momentum," said
Macri.
"The
truth is that this project is going to mark a turning point for Patagonia, for
Argentina ... it is going to generate energy for 1.5 million homes, renewable
energy, in a province that is slated to become a leading player in renewable
energy," he said.
"Something
that is very central to a country is having energy. Without energy, a country
cannot develop ... that is why we are prioritizing this project, which is
additionally renewable energy," Macri said.
Engineering
and construction giant China Gezhouba Group Company (CGGC) is spearheading the
hydropower project, which is expected to create 5,000 direct and 15,000
indirect jobs once complete.
When the dams
are completed, the South American country will be able to generate an
additional 4.95 billion kilowatt hours (kWh) in energy, reducing its reliance
on fossil fuels and improving its energy structure.
Annual
savings in imported fuel will reach 1.1 billion U.S. dollars, according to
Gezhouba's estimates.
The project
is poised to help drive "growth" and "development"
regionally and nationally by upgrading Argentina's energy sector, noted Macri.
La Barrancosa
will be equipped with three propeller-style Kaplan turbines able to generate an
average of 1,782 gigawatt hours (GWh) a year, while Condor Cliff will feature
five Francis turbines able to produce an average of 3,167 GWh a year.
"Chinese
investment in infrastructure in Argentina offers a great opportunity to
complement our economies," said economist Gonzalo Tordini, who teaches at
the National University of Quilmes in southern Buenos Aires.
Tordini
believes "profitable partnerships between Argentine and Chinese
companies" in energy generation "allow us to visualize a concrete
example of mutual benefit in ties between countries."
The dams
represent Argentina's third largest hydroelectric complex after Yacyreta and
Salto Grande, he noted, and will make Santa Cruz the country's second largest
producer of electric energy.
"That's
why the project is of great transcendence for the country, since Argentina
needs to urgently increase its output of clean energies to meet home
consumption and to make any policy of promoting industrial and agricultural
production viable," said Tordini.
"Argentina
has found in China a great partner to carry out this project that Santa Cruz's
leaders have dreamed of since the 1950s. The Santa Cruz River is one of the
country's biggest, that's why the dams that are under construction will help
achieve a longed for dream of Argentina's Patagonia, which will benefit the
whole country," said the expert.
Source: Xinhua