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Chinese dam in Guinea could kill 1,500 chimpanzees, experts warn

  • Planned Koukoutamba dam to be built in reserve established to protect chimps from mining

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Western chimpanzees, which have declined by 80 per cent in the past 20 years, are now considered critically endangered. Photo: Shutterstock
The Guardian

Up to 1,500 chimpanzees could be killed by a new Chinese dam that will swamp a crucial sanctuary for the endangered primate in Guinea, experts have warned.

The 294MW Koukoutamba dam will be built by Sinohydro, the world’s biggest hydroelectric power plant construction company, in the middle of a newly declared protected area called the Moyen-Bafing National park.

The Chinese company is already facing similar criticism for building a dam in Indonesia that threatens the only known habitat of a newly discovered species of orangutan.
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Its executives signed a contract this week with local representatives eager to secure a power project that will bring energy and funds to one of Africa’s poorest countries.

The flooding of swathes of the park is expected to force the displacement of 8,700 people.

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It will also increase the pressure on western chimpanzees, which have declined by 80 per cent in the past 20 years, and are now considered critically endangered – the highest level of risk – by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

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