New wave of protests against the Nenskra dam

CEE Bankwatch Network
Bankwatch
Published in
2 min readApr 30, 2018

Since the Nenskra project’s launch in 2015, local Svans have been continuously raising their concerns over the 280-megawatt hydropower plant (HPP) at their doorstep. The demonstration in Chuberi comes after a series of preceding events in Tbilisi, Oni, and Mestia in the past two months.

Today, we gathered in Chuberi to support and show solidarity to locals who are protesting against the Nenskra HPP. Unfortunately, we are stuck in the past and, instead of shifting to modern technologies, the country pushes for what the modern world has rejected long ago. We say ‘No’ to big dams, as in the long run it is much more profitable for locals to keep the nature than destruct 400 hectares of forest for one single project. That is why we are saying ‘No’ to HPPs in Svaneti and in Georgia — they destruct our cultural heritage and nature.

Dato Gulbani, a protester in Chuberi.

The stakes are high. A billion-worth Nenskra project, backed by public institutions, such as the EBRD and ADB, will flood communal lands and vast territories in Svaneti. Despite the magnitude of such pervasive construction, potential economic and environmental impacts have not been properly assessed.

Previous attempts by the Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs and the Deputy Minister of Economy to address public disapproval of the hydropower developments in the region did little to bring about a needed change and propose any workable solution.

Unable to influence local decision-makers, Svan representatives appeal to public financiers that account for 75 % of all Nenskra funding. They will address the EBRD during the annual meeting in Jordan to challenge the bank’s involvement in the Georgian hydropower sector.

I will tell the banks to stay away from such proposal as they threaten to destruct Svaneti. Wrecking nature in Svaneti means intervention in people’s lives and losing strategic zone for Georgia along the conflict zone with Abkhazia.

Manana Saghliani, the leader of Svan Lalkhor.

Originally published at bankwatch.org.

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