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Planned water reserve intended to ease shortages in the Panama Canal fuels river protest

  • On May 16, 2025, around 200 people, mostly farmers, protested on dozens of boats along the Indio River in Panama against a planned canal reservoir.
  • The protest followed plans by the Panama Canal Authority to build a $1.6 billion reservoir using the Indio River to address severe 2023 water shortages affecting canal operations and Panama City water supply.
  • The reservoir would take four years to complete, provide water for over two million people, increase daily ship crossings by 12 to 13, and support new water treatment facilities, but would displace about 2,000 residents through flooding.
  • Protesters demanded consultation and permission from affected communities, while officials dismissed alternative ideas due to cost, legal, and logistical challenges, noting another project would displace 200,000 people; former Canal administrator Jorge Luis Quijano stressed water storage necessity.
  • The protest highlights community opposition to the reservoir and suggests that balancing canal efficiency and local impacts requires ongoing dialogue and resettlement planning with stakeholders.
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Associated Press NewsAssociated Press News
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Planned water reserve intended to ease shortages in the Panama Canal fuels river protest

Dozens of boats carrying around 200 people traveled along the country’s central Indio River on Friday in protest against a planned reservoir in the Panama Canal intended to solve water shortages in the waterway that have threatened international trade flow.

·United States
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Far Left

Peasant communities of Donoso, in Colón, Panama, held a land and water protest this Friday in defense of the Indian River, due to the Government’s intention to build a reservoir promoted by the Panama Canal Authority’s (ACP) board of directors. READ ALSO: Trade unions maintain an indefinite strike in Panama despite the repression and authoritarianism of Mulino During the march, dozens of boats with about 200 people carrying Panamanian flags move…

In about thirty motor canoes, around 400 peasants sailed along the Indian River in rejection of the construction of a reservoir for the Panama Canal that would force thousands of families to relocate. “We don’t want to get rid of the water from the river, we need that water,” says 48-year-old farmer Ariel Troya. “If the project goes ahead, it takes away the whole future,” he adds.Keep reading...

·Granada, Spain
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  • 67% of the sources lean Left
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Winnipeg Free Press broke the news in Winnipeg, Canada on Friday, May 16, 2025.
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