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Protests Mount Against Mining Giant |
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By Stephen Leahy*
LEAD:
The Canadian mining giant Goldcorp, which runs the largest gold
mine in Mexico, is racking up complaints about its environmental
violations. In Honduras, officials are considering legal action.
TORONTO - Dangerous levels of lead and arsenic
have been found in the blood of Honduran villagers living downstream
from a controversial gold and silver mine owned by Canada's Goldcorp
Inc., the world's third largest gold mining firm.
According to the ecologists who organized the study, lead and arsenic
levels in the blood were higher than the maximum recommended by
international standards (70 ug/dl) in a sample of 10 people who
live near the San Martín mine, in San Ignacio, a municipality located
in the central Siria Valley.
The study, presented last year and downplayed by the mining industry,
is just one more item in the growing file opened in Honduras against
the company operating the mine, which has been the target of local
and international protests since it opened in 1999.
Although it is operated by Entre Mares, a Honduran company that
is a subsidiary of the Canadian Glamis Gold Ltd., it is now under
Goldcorp Inc., based in the western Canadian city of Vancouver,
which bought out Glamis in November.
That takeover makes Goldcorp the third largest gold producer in
the world, with mining concessions throughout the Americas and Australia.
One of the firm's most ambitious projects will be launched in Mexico,
in Zacatecas state, for which Goldcorp obtained mining permits in
mid-January in an expedited way. At a cost of 882 million dollars
and proven and probable reserves totaling an estimated 9.98 billion
ounces of gold, Peñasquito would be the country's largest gold mine.
Goldcorp, which proudly proclaims on its website that it is "The
world's lowest cost gold producer", maintains several conventional
open-pit mines, like San Martín in Honduras, which use a water-based
sodium cyanide solution poured over huge piles of ore to separate
the gold.
The used cyanide solution is a deadly toxin and has to be carefully
stored. This process is in common use, but environmental experts
says it consumes huge amounts of fresh water and generates highly
toxic byproducts, including heavy metals like mercury and arsenic,
and can contaminate water sources that are used for human consumption.
The people living in the Siria Valley have long complained about
the effects on their health and the water shortages resulting from
the San Martín mine, from which Glamis has extracted 529,088 ounces
(about 15,000 kg) of gold out of the ground since 2001, worth approximately
412 million dollars.
The most recent studies that detected arsenic in the blood (which
can cause serious problems in the gastrointestinal, cardiovascular
and nervous systems), were done at the behest of environmental groups,
among them the Siria Valley Environmentalist Committee, by Italian
activist Flaviano Bianchini, who has conducted studies of this type
in several Central American countries.
But Bianchini's tests have come under fire from government officials
and from mining executives who say they lack scientific rigor.
The Honduran Ministry of Environment plans to send samples to experts
in Colombia to confirm Bianchini's results indicating blood contamination.
"We are studying the case and are awaiting the results from Colombia
to take a final decision," Environment Minister Mayra Mejía told
Tierramérica.
Aldo Santos, from the Attorney General's Office, stated "There is
strong evidence pointing to high contamination in the area."
Goldcorp also owns a similar gold and silver mine in Guatemala,
the Marlin, also from Glamis, and located in the municipality of
Sipakapa and San Miguel Ixtahuacán. Local protests have left two
people dead and many injured.
But Goldcorp denies the accusations. "Goldcorp already operates
Marlin and San Martín at North American standards," Jeff Wilhoit,
the company's vice-president of investor relations, told Tierramérica.
In the case of the Marlin mine, the study indicating contamination
of the Tzalá River "has been refuted and disproved," and the "communities
closest to the mine voted in favor of the mine," Wilhoit said.
With respect to San Martín, the executive maintained that the mine
has not caused water shortages or contamination: "The water pumped
from our wells in no way impacts the water being used from springs
or wells outside the project area."
And as for charges that waste from the mine had caused health problems
in nearby communities, he stated, "Not true. There is a national
study that refutes this allegation."
The company also refutes complaints from representatives of communities
neighboring San Martín and Marlin who say they were not consulted
about the mines beforehand.
"Goldcorp is very active in working with communities where our mines
are located... We contribute immensely to the education, health
and safety of those communities, which has been misrepresented by
some non-governmental organizations which have their own agendas,"
Melanie Pilon, director of investor relations, told Tierramérica.
Wilhoit added that in the case of the Marlin mine, "Goldcorp endeavored
to include all interested parties in the consultation process. Particular
attention was paid to overcoming the language barrier. All communications
were carried out in Spanish and Mam (a local indigenous language)."
Nearly 60 percent of the mining and exploration companies in the
world are Canadian. They generate more than 40 billion dollars annually,
representing about four percent of Canada's gross domestic product
(GDP).
"Canadians are appalled when they find out what some Canadian companies
are up to in the South," but few Canadians know what is going on
at mine projects in South America or elsewhere due to limited media
coverage, says Karyn Keenan, program officer with the Halifax Initiative,
a coalition of Canadian environmental and human rights NGOs.
But little by little, media attention has grown, especially recently,
when people from Latin America affected by mines appeared in 2006
at a series of public forums about the corporate social responsibility
of Canada's mining, oil and gas sectors.
For the first time, Canadian government officials had direct contact
with the people who have been impacted by Canadian companies, Keenan
said.
Activists have long claimed that the inability or unwillingness
of local governments to enforce international human rights and environmental
standards should not give Canadian companies license to ignore these
standards.
An official report on regulating the sector's out-of-country operations
will go before the Canadian government shortly. The report is "unprecedented
in Canadian history," says Keenan, because it represents a consensus
between NGOs, mining industry and government officials.
"Industry doesn't want strong, binding Canadian laws on their operations
overseas, but there are some who know they need to do more than
publish codes of ethics on their websites," she added.
Although the content of the report remains secret, it is expected
to recommend that an independent dispute mechanism and ombudsman
office be established to investigate complaints and conduct audits
of Canadian mining, oil and gas operations abroad.
Whether the current conservative Canadian government will act on
the report's recommendations remains to be seen.
* With reporting by Thelma Mejía from Honduras. |