WASHINGTON,
DC. August, 2002
The case of mining – Johannesburg, South Africa, developed as a “gold
rush” city after home builders quarrying for stones accidentally struck
the yellow metal in 1886. Gold lies a mile or more beneath the surface of the
city, and is present as an extremely tiny share of ore—far less than
one-thousandth of one percent—so miners have to excavate massive
amounts of rock in order to get a few fragments of metal. In the decades
since that discovery, mining for gold, coal, and other minerals has
completely altered the physical landscape of this former farming region,
leaving mountains of waste rock and ore in dumps south of the city.
These huge dumps will be starkly apparent to delegates to the
World Summit on Sustainable Development as they fly into Johannesburg.
Holding the Summit in this scarred mining region highlights the need to reevaluate
an industrial activity that today provides less than one percent of the
world’s economic product, yet consumes close to 10 percent of world
energy, and spews nearly half of all toxic emissions from industry in
countries such as the United States.
Mining is one of the planet’s leading polluters. Mines use
large quantities of deadly chemicals, including cyanide and mercury, to
separate metal from ore. Catastrophic spills of mine wastes in recent years
have resulted in enormous fish kills, soil and water pollution, and damage to
human health. In 2000, for instance, a tailings dam split open at the Baia
Mare mine in Romania. This accident sent some 100,000 tons of wastewater, and
20,000 tons of sludge contaminated with cyanide, copper, and heavy metals,
into the Tisza river, and eventually into the Danube, destroying 1,240 tons
of fish and polluting the drinking water supplies of 2.5 million people.
Most new mining development is taking place in some of the
world’s most ecologically fragile regions, including a titanium mine in
a Madagascar forest inhabited by rare lemurs, birds, and indigenous plant
species; gold exploration in Peruvian cloud forest; and tantalite mining in
the Democratic Republic of Congo’s Okapi Reserve, home to the endangered
mountain gorilla. Indigenous peoples have disproportionately borne the costs
of mining, and continue to do so: according to one estimate, as much as half
of all gold produced between 1995 and 2015 will come from indigenous
peoples’ lands.
Mining has not proven beneficial to local communities or
national economies over the long term either. Mining-dependent nations
typically have slow rates of economic development, and some of the highest
poverty rates. Minerals prices are volatile, so mining regions have been subject
to unstable “boom-and-bust” economies. Mining companies in
Australia, the United States, China, the Philippines, and elsewhere, laid off
millions of workers in the 1990s, when minerals prices plummeted. Between
1990 and 2000, South African mines laid off close to 400,000
workers—almost half the workforce.
Despite major strides in improving mine safety, mining remains
one of the world’s most hazardous occupations. According to the
International Labor Organization, the sector employs less than 1 percent of
the global work force but is responsible for 5 percent of all worker deaths
on the job.
The short sections devoted to mining in the Draft Plan of Implementation—the document being negotiated
at the World Summit by official delegates from around the world—fall
far short of advancing a coherent program to address these difficult issues.
A more aggressive approach is needed, both at the World Summit as well as in
other efforts such as the World Bank’s Extractive Industries Review,
which is currently underway. In the months and years that follow,
governments, lending agencies, businesses, taxpayers, and local communities
will need to ensure that societies can obtain the benefits of minerals
without incurring heavy ecological and human costs. A meaningful plan of
action would include the following elements:
Level the playing field for recycling and secondary materials.
- Phase
out subsidies for mining.
The United States, Australia, and Canada offer mining rights for
absurdly small sums of money—$12 a hectare in the United States,
for example. Countries such as Brazil, Ecuador, and Papua New Guinea
offer foreign companies incentives such as royalty waivers and the right
to expatriate all profits. Eliminating these handouts and charging for
mining rights would be not only environmentally beneficial, but would
also add income to the public treasury— resources which could be
directed toward developing more sustainable materials paths, or to
improving social services such as education or healthcare.
- Pursue
sustainable materials strategies.
It takes far less energy to recycle discarded materials than to extract,
process, and refine metals from ore. It takes 95 percent less energy to
produce aluminum from recycled materials rather than from bauxite ore, for
instance. Recycling copper takes seven times less energy than processing
ore; recycled steel uses three-and-a-half times less. Despite the
obvious gains that might come from picking this low-hanging fruit, just
13 percent of copper consumed worldwide comes from recycled sources. In
large part, this inefficiency can be attributed to the subsidies for
virgin minerals extraction, which make it cheaper to dig up new minerals
than to reuse above-ground stocks.
- Enforce
the “polluter pays” principle during mine operation and
closure.
Taxpayers and governments have been left with hefty tabs for cleaning up
abandoned mines, after companies have gone bankrupt or just walked away
from uneconomical projects. For instance, since 1992, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency has spent millions of dollars to reduce
the damage from cyanide spills at the Summitville mine in Colorado,
after the company that operated the mine declared bankruptcy. The cost
for cleaning up tens of thousands of closed mines in the United States
alone is estimated at between $35 and $70 billion—and India,
China, South Africa, and countries in Eastern Europe face sizable
cleanup tabs as well. Legislators and environmental agencies must ensure
that polluters, not taxpayers, foot these bills.
Protect ecosystems, communities, and workers.
- Keep
mines out of protected areas and other fragile ecosystems.
Mining moves enormous quantities of earth; altogether, it strips more of
the Earth’s surface each year than natural erosion by rivers does.
Very little of this material is actually used—for example, on
average, some 220 tons of earth are excavated to produce just a ton of
copper. Despite the damage to landscapes and ecosystems, mines have been
given permits to operate in several national parks and World Heritage
sites, including the Kakadu National Reserve in Australia, the
Doñana National Park in Spain, and the Sierra Imataca Reserve in
Venezuela. In addition to putting a moratorium on new mines in
ecologically sensitive areas, authorities must cancel permits already
allotted to mines in protected areas.
- Protect
communities and ecosystems from toxic chemicals.
A number of farsighted leaders are taking strong stands against the
continued use of cyanide, mercury, and other toxic chemicals currently
used in mining. The Baia Mare spill in Romania in 2000 prompted the
Czech Senate to ban gold mining using cyanide leaching methods. In 2001,
the German Parliament prohibited the use of this technology, and in June
2002, the President of Costa Rica declared a moratorium. Groups in the
U.S. states of Colorado and Wisconsin are currently pushing for a ban on
cyanide leaching.
- Respect
decisions made by local residents about whether or not to mine.
Local communities must be able to determine whether or not to allow mining
or exploration in their backyard—once they have received full
information about the proposed project. In June 2002, for example,
residents of the Tambogrande region in northern Peru voted
overwhelmingly against the continued operation of a Canadian-run open
pit gold mine, with 94 percent opposing the project.
- Set
up post-mining transition plans for workers and communities.
With miners losing jobs around the world, governments, firms, and unions
have a tremendous opportunity to create safer, more meaningful, and
ecologically sustainable employment for these workers and the families
they support. Following the enormous layoffs of the 1990s, the South
African Employment Bureau and the National Union of Mineworkers
developed transition plans to retrain and employ former mineworkers.
This transition has helped take the South African economy on a more
sustainable track, with some mineworkers finding new jobs in steel and
paper recycling, for example.
GAVIOTAS + GLOBALIZATION AND ITS DISCONTENTS + WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT + GLOBAL WARMING
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Links
Greenpeace site on the Earth
Summit 2002
United Nations: Johannesburg Summit
2002
United Nations: World Summit
on Sustainable Development (flat site)
International Institute for
Sustainable Development (IISD)'s portal to the World Summit on Sustainable
Development
United Nations Division for Sustainable
Development
Sustainable
Development site on the Earth Summit 2002
South Africa's official Summit page
WSSD Civil Society Global Forum website
The Heinrich Boell Foundation's WSSD
site
Memorandum for the World Summit
New partnership for Africa's
development
IISD's Linkages portal to the 2002 Earth Summit
Ministers' statement on
the Earth Summit, from the April G8 meeting in Banff, Canada
Citizens network for sustainable development
International Institute for Environment and
Development
Stakeholder Forum Earth Summit website
International Union for the
Conservation of Nature WSSD website
Friends of the Earth's Radio Earth
Summit website
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