Baker River (Chile) Explained

Baker River
Source1 Location:Bertrand Lake
Mouth Location:Baker Channel, Pacific Ocean
Subdivision Type1:Countries
Length:170km (110miles)[1]
Source1 Elevation:200m (700feet)
Discharge1 Avg:875m3/s[2]
Basin Size:26726km2

The Baker River is a river located in the Aysén del General Carlos Ibáñez del Campo Region of the Chilean Patagonia. It is Chile's largest river in terms of volume of water. The river flows out of Bertrand Lake, which is fed by General Carrera Lake. It runs along the east side of the Northern Patagonian Ice Field and empties into the Pacific Ocean, near the town of Caleta Tortel. The river forms a delta, dividing into two major arms, of which only the northernmost one is navigable.

Its characteristic turquoise-blue color is due to the glacial sediments deposited in it.

It was the proposed site of a controversial major hydro-electric project, involving five dams, to be the biggest in the history of Chile. Called HidroAysén, the project was a joint venture between Endesa Chile a subsidiary of the international energy conglomerate Enel, and Colbún S.A. a subsidiary of Minera Valparaíso. The series of hydro-electric dams were proposed along both the Baker and Pascua rivers, two of Chile's mightiest rivers. The project was opposed by a protest campaign led by Chilean and international environmental activist groups. Few rivers this large in the world remain undammed and free flowing.[3] Chile's Committee of Ministers overturned the environmental permits for the HidroAysén dam project June 2014.[4] [5]

Tributaries

The river also receives the waters of the Cochrane Lake through the Cochrane River. Other major tributaries are:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www2.redenlaces.cl/webeducativos/hidrografia/zona5/cuenca10.htm Río Baker
  2. Web site: Hidrografía Región de Aysén . 2022-03-02 . Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional de Chile . Spanish.
  3. Web site: Resources - International Rivers.
  4. Web site: Chile Scraps Huge Patagonia Dam Project After Years of Controversy. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140615130949/http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/energy/2014/06/140610-chile-hidroaysen-dam-patagonia-energy-environment/ . 2014-06-15 .
  5. Web site: Chilean Patagonia spared from US$10 billion mega-dam project | David Hill . . 11 June 2014 .