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Strategies & Market Trends : The Financial Collapse of 2001 Unwinding

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From: elmatador10/30/2019 8:43:08 AM
1 Recommendation

Recommended By
DinoNavarre

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My friend describes the real Chile situation.

I mentioned cost of energy and remembered a project he was involved there.

QUOTE

This is the project I worked in Chile.

Super well planned and clean.

Chile has a rope strangling them for not having the clean and cheap energy that these Patagonia projects would generate.

There's an American named Thompson, banked by American NGOs who bought land in Patagonia and nearly split Chile in half. He is playing these NGO protests.

I went to Patagonia, HydroAysen made clarifications with the communities, and were able to approve the construction of the hydroelectric plants.

Then they bumped into the transmission line project, because someone doesn't want to see a line going through the stones of the Cordillera.

Bachelet canceled the project when she was elected last time.
Tremendous fake-news to spoil the project.

HydroAysen's energy would be cheap, the plant would have year-round water, minimal environmental impact.

Every year there was a panel of international experts evaluating the project and the last time I saw it (2010 or 2011) they recommended Endesa and Colburn to be less conservative. They were throwing money away with so many precautions and excessive crap factors in the construction of the plant.

We're in a crazy world, just motherfuckers.

Pinheira is a businessman, billionaire, owner of LAM and merged with TAM. LAN had the money and TAM the huge Brazilian market.

Pinheira had a few more businesses, dropped everything to try to improve Chile.
He dug out those 77 miners that were buried. A tremendous political risk if it went wrong.

The guy knows that you need to give something to society too, but you can not achieve something in life without working with NGOs wanting to breastfeed all the time.

Every people has the government it deserves ... Chile could be in a much better position ...
UNQUOTE
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