El
Salvador is experiencing what we could look forward to if the TPP is
signed
Australian
mining is poisoning El Salvador. It could soon send it broke, too
OceanaGold,
an Australian mining company, is trying to compel El Salvador to
allow it to mine. If it wins a high-profile legal case, the results
for the poor country will be dire
3
October, 2014
The
stream that leads into the San Sebastian River in the poor and tiny
Central American country of El Salvador runs bright yellow, not for
the gold in the mine nearby but for the chemical byproducts which
leach into the water. That stream is emblematic in a fight between an
Australian mining company and the El Salvador government, over
whether there should be gold mining in the country.
If
El Salvador wins this fight, it will preserve a bipartisan policy on
mining, a country’s right to make policy generally, and to protect
its main water supply in particular.
If
it loses, then a foreign mining company will be able to ride
roughshod over the country’s democratic process and prosecute a
financial claim that could send its government broke.
The
yellow stream which symbolises what can happen with gold mining is a
consequence of “acid mine drainage”. This stream in question
flows into the San Sebastian River, where it has killed all aquatic
life, and then into the sea, where it causes further environmental
damage.
Nearby
San Sebastian village suffers a high rate of disease linked to
arsenic poisoning as a result of this pollution. El Salvador’s
government believes that, if the Australian mining company’s
attempt to impose a new gold mine is successful, there could be even
more devastating consequences for the country’s limited drinkable
water supply.
The
Australian-listed, Melbourne headquartered company OceanaGold is
suing El Salvador in a US-based court for more than $300 million -
almost half the government’s annual budget – over the
government’s refusal to grant the gold mining permit.
OceanaGold
is claiming that under the US-central America free trade agreement,
it has a “right” to compel mining or be compensated for loss of
profits. In response, the company will today be handed a petition
signed by 200,000 opponents to its attempt to force gold mining in El
Salvador.
OceanaGold
focused its attention on gold mining in El Salvador when it acquired
the Canadian company Pacific Rim in November 2013, with the intention
of developing Pacific Rim’s El Dorado gold exploration site in El
Salvador’s north. OceanaGold knew at the time it acquired Pacific
Rim that the El Salvador government had refused to grant a mining
permit for the El Dorado site, yet it proceeded with the acquisition
none the less.
The
El Salvador government says that the original application to mine did
not meet environmental safety standards and that the proposed mine
poses risks to the country’s already limited water supplies.
OceanaGold denies the risks, even though gold mining is notorious for
polluting waterways with arsenic, mercury and other toxic metals.
Just
2% of El Salvador’s water is determined by its government to be of
good quality and what were clean ground water supplies have already
been degraded by early exploration at the El Dorado site. Further
water pollution, especially of the country’s main watershed in the
region of the proposed mine, would have disastrous consequences for
El Salvador’s poor and densely packed population.
The
El Dorado gold mine has been the site of protests, a result of which
has been the murder of 10 people, with others receiving death
threats. Opposition to gold mining became a critical political issue
in El Salvador’s 2009 elections, with both major parties backing a
moratorium on metals mining in the country.
It
is not yet clear whether the court will recognize OceanaGold’s
status as a US-based company, necessary for the claim to proceed. But
with other potential mining claims against El Salvador’s government
waiting in the wings, the court’s decision will determine whether
El Salvador can choose to protect its environment or whether foreign
corporations can determine a country’s clean water policy.
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