The itinerary that was made for us to include all of the areas that we wanted to visit was excellent, you did a great job in fitting a lot into a 3 week period....... There was no one stand out highlight of our trip as we enjoyed every place we visited and they were all individually exciting and quite different. If we had to pick one it would be a toss up between Easter Island and Machu Picchu. Thank you for all of the organization that went into our trip, we did not have to worry about any aspect other than to turn up at the allotted time and someone would look after every detail for us.
Many Thanks
Connecting Acre, Brazil, a state in the Amazon, with the cities of Matarani, Ilo, and San Juan de Marcona which are located along Peru’s southern coast is the Trans-Oceanic Highway. The highway is 3,400 miles long and basically entails the renovation of existing roads as well as the construction of new ones. The main purpose of the highway is to make it easier to get Brazilian goods to the Pacific coast and thereby the Asian market as well as facilitate the transfer of Asian products to the Atlantic coast, and consequently to the United States, Europe and Brazilian markets. It is anticipated that it will attract more tourists to the area. On the other hand, it has been a concern of environmentalists that the road will cause an increase in the destruction of the Amazon rainforest.
A Vast Construction Project
When the project began, there was a more complex network of roads in Brazil
so construction efforts centered on building a bridge across the Acre River
and making the border crossing more efficient. In Peru, the road between
the border of Brazil and Inambari River needed to be paved and three roads
that were already paved that went across the Andes and connected with the
cities of San Juan de Marcona, Matarani and Ilo needed to be renovated and
improved. In addition, the work required 1,606 miles of highway to be constructed
and renovated as well as 11 miles of city roads. There were a total of 22
bridges that were to be built, in particular the President Guillermo Billinghurst
Bridge. This bridge was designed to cross the Madre de Dios River, a few
miles from the main city of the department of Madre de Dios, Puerto Maldonado.
The bridge, at a cost of $22 million US, has a length of 450 miles and displays
a large hanging structure. The cost of building the Trans-Oceanic highway
was over $1.51 billion US. Funding sources were the Andean Development Corporation
and the Brazilian National Development Bank. These bank loans enabled the
financing of a Public-Private Partnership between the companies contracted
to do the work and the Peruvian government.
Environmental concerns
Although the commercial gains from building the highway were supported by
the governments of Peru, Bolivia and Brazil, environmentalists were concerned
that the highway was approved without an environmental impact study and
it would affect the region negatively from an environmental standpoint.
They reported that climate changes would result as the new roads broke up
the natural expanse of the Amazon forest and make it hotter and drier. The
atmosphere would be filled with more carbon gases from the forest causing
the rise in temperatures.
Fears Are Confirmed
An environmental impact study conducted during the construction of the highway
concluded that within ten years the highway will degrade the natural forests
as well as urban areas, cause problems for water resources and biodiversity
and have great impact on the local societies by invading the native land
in general.
In land of contradictions and extremes, the Trans-Oceanic Highway is another
Peruvian example of conflicting interests in a complex situation.
Author: Gary Sargent - Escaped to Peru / Escaped to Latin America