40 The Americas TheEconomistApril30th 2022
Paraguay
Highway through hell
T
he gran chaco, a vast sprawl of
swamp, scrub and savannah which
stretches across Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay
and Argentina, has long been hard to get
through. In the 16th century its nomadic
hunters ambushed Spanish wouldbe con-
quistadors. When Bolivia and Paraguay
fought over the “Green Hell” in the 1930s,
thirst was thought to have killed more sol
diers than bullets. Until 2019 a region the
size of Austria in Paraguay’s part of the
Chaco contained no paved roads at all.
But earlier this year Paraguay’s govern
ment inaugurated the first half of a dual
carriage motorway that will bisect the re
gion for 544km (338 miles) east to west. It
forms the main part of the Bioceanic Road
Corridor, an infrastructure project talked
about for decades by the countries around
the Chaco, which finally seems to be get
ting off the ground.
The plan is that the road will connect
soyabean farmers in Brazil and cattle
ranchers in landlocked Paraguay to mar
kets in Asia, by going through northern Ar
gentina and on to Chile’s ports. Arnoldo
Wiens, Paraguay’s publicworks minister,
claims that compared with shipping goods
through the Panama Canal, the corridor
will save the Southern Cone’s agricultural
producers 14 days and $1,000 per contain
er, or a third of their logistics costs.
The first stage of the road—a 276km
stretch between the riverside village of
Carmelo Peralta and the town of Loma Pla
ta—was built by a ccvb, a consortium
formedbyQueirozGalvão,a Braziliancon
glomerate,andOchoa, a localcompany.It
wasbuiltontimeandwithinthebudgetof
$443m:a rarityincorruptionpronePara
guay.Byearly 2024 a $103mbridgeshould
linkCarmeloPeraltatoBrazil,andthecor
ridorwillreachtheArgentineborder.The
TransChaco highway, a potholed road
runningnorthtoBolivia,isalsobeingwid
enedandimproved.
MarioAbdoBenítez,Paraguay’spresi
dentfromtheconservativeColoradoParty,
iskeentotakethecredit.Officialssaythat
nearly3,000kmofpavedroadshavebeen
builtsincehecametopowerin2018.That
isfarmorethananyofhispredecessors
managed,includingAlfredoStroessner,a
dictatorwhoruledfor 35 years.Yetmanyof
theseprojectswereenabledbylegislation
passedunderMrAbdoBenítez’spredeces
sor,HoracioCartes,sayalliesofMrCartes.
Noteveryoneispleasedbytheasphalt.
Theroadbuildingfrenzy“deepensanun
diversified,extractivistmodel”,warnsVe
rónica Serafini, an economist.Beef and
soyabeansmakeupalmost70%ofPara
guay’sgoodsexportsbyvalueandsupport
athird ofgdp. Ratherthan build more
megaprojects,thecountryshouldsupport
smallfarmersandinvestinbetterpublic
transportanddrainageinAsunción,the
floodpronecapital,shethinks.Braziland
Argentinawillhavetoinvestinsomeroad
workstooif thecorridoristolinkupseam
lessly,concedesJuanRivarola,theproject’s
environmentalandsocialmanager.
ButforJulioPortillo,a truckdriver,the
new road is already making life easier.
ReachingCarmeloPeraltafromLomaPlata
usedtotake 12 hoursalongarutteddirt
track.Ifitrainedhewasmaroonedinthe
mudfordays.Itnowtakesfourhours.He
stillbringsa shotguntohuntcaimansand
peccaries,a kindofwildboar,toeatifhe
getsstranded.“TheParaguayanChacoisa
worldapart,”hesays.“Ifyougetstuck,no
oneiscomingtohelp.”
The impact ofthe new motorwayis
moreuncertainforlocalindigenouspeo
ple,especiallythefewwhostillliveinthe
forests.“Iseebothsides,positiveandneg
ative,”saysDemetrioPicanerei,anindige
nousAyoreoteacherinthevillageofChai
di.Beforehewasborn,hisparentsfledur
banAyoreoneighbourhoodsinBoliviathat
wereravagedbydrugsandalcohol.Hewor
riesthatthenewmotorway,andtheinev
itabletruckstops,motelsanddinersthat
will spring upalong it, willspread the
same“vices”.
Nobodyisgoingtoslowmedown
Another problem is deforestation. Be
tween 1985 and 2013 theChacolosta fifthof
itssurfacearea.Treeshavebeenbulldozed
andburnt,mainlyforcropsandpasture.
Relativetoitssize itisshrinkingfaster
thantheAmazonrainforest.Manyendan
geredjaguars,tapirsandgiantarmadillos
willsoonendupasroadkillortrophies,
worriesLuisRecalde,a conservationist.To
try to prevent this, the consortium of
builders has created 15 underpasses for
wildlife.Thecorridorhasalsobeenslightly
divertedattwoplacestoavoidpassingdi
rectlythroughAyoreoland.
OfficialssaytheintegrationoftheCha
cowiththerestofthecountryislongover
due.Theareacoversnearlytwothirdsof
Paraguay’sterritorybutishometojust3%
ofits people. Hundredsof jobs will be
createdoncefleetsofBraziliantrucksstart
to thunder through,Mr Wienspredicts.
Even MrPicanerei concedes thatitwill
makegettingtothehospitaleasier.“The
roadswereveryuglybefore,”hesays. n
CHAIDI
A new motorway could one day rival the PanamaCanal
Trans-Chaco
highway
Bioceanic
RoadCorridor
(underdevelopment)
PA R AG UAY
Asunción
Carmelo
Peralta
Loma
Plata
Chaidi
Amazon rainforest
Gran Chaco
Paraguayan
Chaco
ARGENTINA
BOLIVIA BRAZIL
C
HIL
E
300 km Sources: IDB; MapBiomas