Article ID: CBB256791646

'Thirsty Sugar Lands': Environmental Impacts of Dams and Empire in Puerto Rico Since 1898 (2021)

unapi

The story of North American dam building is incomplete without the United States' Caribbean territories because the motivations and consequences of building dams there were different from on the mainland. Between 1910 and 1914, the Puerto Rican Irrigation Service built three large dams in the island's south-east to irrigate canefields owned by North American sugar companies. The water harnessed by the South Coast Irrigation Project (SCIP) doubled sugar yields in its district in the decades following the project's completion, generating huge profits for North American sugar interests. However, the sugar boom did not lead to sustained economic growth on the island and did little to increase the standard of living for many Puerto Rican fieldworkers and their families. The project also brought a bumper crop of unforeseen environmental consequences. North American engineers underestimated the vagaries of Puerto Rico's climate. Droughts and extended dry periods led to water shortages that continually menaced irrigation. Stormy weather created another unanticipated problem for the dams. Hurricanes and heavy rains in the mountains north of the sugar lands contributed to high erosion rates that accelerated sediment accumulation in the reservoirs and reduced their storage capacity. Together, drought and siltation threatened to render the dams obsolete. Hydroelectric turbines, installed as an incidental part of the project, provided affordable electricity that powered groundwater pumps to make up for surface water shortages. Groundwater saved the sugar boom, but sediments continued to build in reservoirs, an enduring legacy of US imperialism that is expensive to mitigate. The SCIP preserved socioeconomic and racial inequalities, but re-engineered the island's hydrosphere, turning the parched south-east into a giant canefield and its rivers into repositories for sediments.

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Authors & Contributors
Macfarlane, Daniel
Evenden, Matthew D.
Hess, David J.
Hirt, Paul W.
Kammen, Daniel M.
Manganiello, Christopher J.
Journals
IA. The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology
Environment and History
Environmental History
IEEE Technology and Society Magazine
Scientia Canadensis: Journal of the History of Canadian Science, Technology, and Medicine
Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society
Publishers
University of North Carolina Press
Potomac Books
Texas A&M University Press
UBC Press
University of Pittsburgh Press
University of Texas Press
Concepts
Hydroelectric power
Dams
Water resource management
Rivers
Environment
Technology and environment, relationship
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
20th century, early
20th century, late
21st century
Modern
Places
United States
Canada
Brazil
Puerto Rico
Colorado River (North America)
Ontario (Canada)
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