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Home > Archives for Protecting rivers and communities > Hydropower development in Georgia

Hydropower development in Georgia

Shuakhevi hydropower plant, Georgia

August 13, 2018

Georgia’s biggest and one of the most controversial hydropower plants is mostly famous for its failures. Two months after becoming operational in 2017 its tunnels collapsed. And after two years of repairs water is leaking from the dam. Shuakhevi hydropower plant (HPP) once promised to bring energy independence to Georgia. Instead it managed to collect an impressive ‘portfolio’ of problems in a wide range of areas: from biodiversity, to gender impacts, to community relations.


The European Parliament resolution urges European financial institution to respect indigenous peoples rights

August 9, 2018

Celebrate the rights of those 5 per cent who hold 80 per cent of the planet’s biodiversity. Today is the International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples.


Devastating floods are the latest warning sign about controversial Nenskra hydropower project

July 31, 2018

From the outside, this tragedy might seem like a natural disaster, a force majeure. But one cannot ignore the human factors at play.


Environmental problems of Shuakhevi Hydro Power Plant, Adjara, Georgia

July 23, 2018

The 184 MW Shuakhevi Hydro Power Plant is under construction on the Adjaristsqali river and two of its main tributaries in the Autonomous Republic of Adjara, Georgia. The design envisages it as a run-of-the-river plant with capacity of diurnal storage


Nenskra Hydro Project – Update

June 29, 2018

The Asian Infrastracture Investment Bank  is considering a non-sovereign loan of USD 100 million for a 280 MW reservoir-type hydropower plant, located in the Nenskra and Nakra valleys of Northwest Georgia. We would like to provide information about new developments that the AIIB should consider as part of its due dillgence on the project. 


Nenskra complaint to the European Investment Bank

June 1, 2018

In our opinion, the European Investment Bank (EIB) has failed to comply with the Standard 7 by not respecting the status of Svans as indigenous peoples. The Bank did not fulfill its environmental and social standards: it ignored the project’s significa


Request to the EBRD’s PCM on the Nenskra hydropower project

May 30, 2018

The conclusions of the EBRD’s Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) are not guided by detailed field work and focus group research with the affected communities – indigenous Svans, nor are they based on the robust and objective analysis of


How compliant is ADB to its own safeguards policies?

May 18, 2018

A Georgia hydropower project has locals and civil society concerned. One of the banks considering funding the project is ADB, yet a complaint filed with its compliance review panel shows the limitations of its safeguards. The panel recommends a full in


Nenskra hydropower project – May 2018 update

May 10, 2018

The banks have a responsibility to ensure that when they make an investment, they mitigate and avoid situations that put persons at risk. The Nenskra dam in Georgia is one example where the lack of proper environmental and social assessment can potenti


New wave of protests against the Nenskra dam

April 30, 2018

On April 21, around 200 people went on a protest in Chuberi to once again oppose the construction of the Nenskra dam and to demand their indigenous status that grants a higher level of safeguards.


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