Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Patagonia condor repopulati­on drive faces wind farm threat

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SIERRA PAILEMAN, Argentina — It was a sunny morning when about 200 people trudged up a hill in Argentina’s southern Patagonia region with a singular mission: free two Andean condors that had been born in captivity.

The emotion was palpable as conservati­onists got ready for a moment that so many had been working toward for months. But the joyous moment was also bitterswee­t.

Preliminar­y plans for a massive wind farm that could be located in the Somuncura Plateau to feed a green hydrogen project is putting at risk a three decade effort to repopulate Patagonia’s Atlantic coast with a bird that is classified as vulnerable to extinction by the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature.

While members of the Mapuche, the largest Indigenous group in the area, played traditiona­l instrument­s, and children threw condor feathers into the air that symbolized their good wishes for the newly liberated birds, an eerie silence engulfed the mountain in Sierra Paileman in Rio Negro province as researcher­s opened the cages where the two specimens of the world’s largest flying bird were kept.

Huasi (meaning home in Quechua) seemed born for this moment. As soon as the cage opened, he spread his wings and took off. Yastay (meaning god that is protector of birds) appeared cautious, uncertain of the wide open skies after spending his first two years in captivity: It took him about an hour before taking off.

Researcher­s sprang into action and started tracking the birds. In the back of their minds were latent worries about what the potential for new wind farms in the area could mean for the lives of these birds.

Conservati­onists fear the birds inevitably would collide with the rotating blades of the turbines. In neighborin­g Chile, an environmen­tal impact study for a planned farm with 65 windmills concluded that as many as four of the rare condors could collide with the massive structures yearly. Environmen­tal authoritie­s rejected the project last year.

“Why are we freeing two? We generally free more than two,” Vanesa Astore, executive director of the Andean Condor Conservati­on Program, said. “We’re at like a maintenanc­e level now.”

Researcher­s had to release Huasi and Yastay now or risk that they would have to remain in captivity for the rest of their lives, which can range from 70 to 80 years, Ms. Astore explained, noting condors can only adapt to the outside world if they are released before their third birthday.

The uncertaint­y regarding the future of the wind farm that would be built by Australian firm Fortescue Future Industries has not only put conservati­onists on alert but has prompted them to slow the pace of reproducti­on and release of the Andean condors even as the company insists it has no plans to set up shop in the Somuncura Plateau.

Condors are notoriousl­y slow breeders that only reach sexual maturity at 9 years old and have an offspring every three years, but researcher­s have found ways to speed that up by removing eggs from pairs in captivity to incubate artificial­ly. When the egg is removed, the pair will then produce another egg within a month, which they will raise while the first one is raised by humans with the help of latex puppets meant to simulate their parents and help them recognize members of their own species.

That strategy allow researcher­s to “increase reproducti­ve capacity by six times,” said Luis Jacome, the head of the Andean Condor Conservati­on Program.

That effort is now on pause.

“We aren’t maximizing because I don’t know what’s going to happen,” Ms. Astore explained.

Since the conservati­on

program started 30 years ago, 81 chicks have been born in captivity, 370 condors have been rehabilita­ted and 230 freed across South America, including Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Chile and Bolivia.

Sixty-six of those have been released along Patagonia’s Atlantic coast, where the bird was nowhere to be seen at the turn of the century. The Andean condor has now made a comeback, and for many locals that has a spiritual resonance.

“The condor flies very high, so our elders used to say that the condor could take a message to those who are no longer here,” said Doris Canumil, 59, a Mapuche who took part in the ceremonies for the liberation of the condors.

While they celebrate the success of the program, conservati­onists worry it could all be erased.

“These birds that we’ve liberated, that once again joined the mountain range with the sea through their flight, that have matured and had their own offspring that live and fly here in this place, they will simply die in the blades of the windmills,” Mr. Jacome said. “So the condor would once again become extinct in the Atlantic

coast.”

Last year, Fortescue unveiled a plan to invest $8.4 billion over a decade in a project to produce green hydrogen for export in what the government touted as the largest internatio­nal investment in Argentina over the past two decades.

The government of President Alberto Fernández celebrated the project, saying it would create 15,000 direct jobs and somewhere between 40,000 and 50,000 indirect jobs.

Yet neither the company nor the provincial government of Rio Negro had carried out an environmen­tal impact study before unveiling the project.

For now at least, Mr. Jacome said, the “only thing green are the dollars” attached to the project.

“We’re putting the cart before the horse,” Mr. Jacome said. “We need to have environmen­tal impact studies that demonstrat­e what is going to be done, how many windmills, where they will be placed.”

Fortescue agrees and says it “is committed to evaluating the social, environmen­tal, engineerin­g, and economic considerat­ions before committing to the developmen­t” of any project.

 ?? Natacha Pisarenko ?? An Andean condor named Yastay, which means "God that is protector of the birds," in the Quechua Indigenous language, is freed Oct. 14 by the Andean Condor conservati­on program where he was born almost three years prior in Sierra Paileman in the Rio Negro province of Argentina.
Natacha Pisarenko An Andean condor named Yastay, which means "God that is protector of the birds," in the Quechua Indigenous language, is freed Oct. 14 by the Andean Condor conservati­on program where he was born almost three years prior in Sierra Paileman in the Rio Negro province of Argentina.

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