SPECIAL REPORT
Foreign TNCs Dominate Mining Industry
Second of three parts
Recent applications for mining
exploration and extraction cover 66 percent of the Cordillera land area.
By Windel Bolinget
Northern Dispatch
Posted by Bulatlat
BAGUIO CITY – The Macapagal-Arroyo
government’s aggressive mining policy to attract new investors in the mining
industry and hence to boost government revenues appears to be paying off. In the
Cordillera region, the number of new mining applications has increased with the
revival of old applications overlapping each other and covering vast
territories. Foreign mining companies are entering into partnerships with the
actively operating mining companies in the region such as the Lepanto
Consolidated Mining Corporation and Philex Mines.
The total area applied for
already covers 66 percent of the region’s total land area.
This year, the Mines and
Geosciences Bureau-Cordillera Administrative Region (MGB-CAR) received 11
applications for the FTAA, each application costing only P10 per hectare as
filing fee at MGB-CAR. For application alone, MGB-CAR, which is under the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), reportedly collected
P7.207 million. (See table below for the list of FTAA applications.)
As of March
31 this year, the MGB-CAR processed a total of 114 various types of
applications: FTAA (11), Mineral Production Sharing Agreement (MPSA - 65),
Exploration Permit (EP - 37) and Industrial Sand and Gravel (ISAG - 1). The
applications cover a total land area of more than 1.2 million hectares or more
than 66 percent of the overall land area of the region. (See the
distribution of the mining applications in various provinces in Table 2 below.)
On top of the
abovementioned applications under process, 15 were approved by the MGB, nine of
which are MPSA (13,166.7700 has.), two are EP (545.675 has.), and four ISAG 53.5
has.). These cover 13.8 million hectares. Benguet province hosts the most
number of approved applications, followed by Abra and Kalinga (see Table 3
below). Note that not a single FTAA filed was approved in the region just after
the enactment of the Mining Act ten years ago. This is due to the stiff
resistance of the Cordillera people.
Mining operations and
TNC partners
Three big
mining companies continue to operate in the Cordillera Region, particularly in
Benguet. After the Itogon communities successfully stopped the bulk-mining
operations of Benguet Corporation, the company shifted to its Acupan Contract
Mining Project in Balatoc, also in Itogon. Lepanto Consolidated Mining Co. (Lepanto)
is expanding its operations from Mankayan toward Buguias town, also in Benguet,
and remains the No. 1 gold producer in the country. The main copper producer,
Philex Mining Corporation (Philex) continues to operate in Tuba, Benguet.
Lepanto has
entered into a partnership agreement with Ivanhoe Mines, a Canadian mining
company. The partnership was proposed to Ivanhoe Mines by President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo. With its investment, Ivanhoe got a 12.7 percent share of
Lepanto. Infused with more capital, Lepanto can pursue expansion projects
outside of Mankayan. For this, Ivanhoe has shares in the mining operations and
applications covering 16,470 hectares processed for MPSA as well as the 243,000
hectares covered by its FTAA applications in the provinces of Benguet, Ilocos
Sur, and Nueva Vizcaya. Lepanto operates its Victoria and Teresa gold projects
(with 7 years tax holiday) as it plans to revive its copper porphyry given the
continuing rise in the price of copper in the international market.
On the other
hand, affected communities are persistent in their protests to stop the
expansion operations of Lepanto. They cite the impact of the company’s alleged
destructive mining operations, which is going on for several decades.
But Lepanto,
like other mining companies in the region, is troubled by labor unrest with
mineworkers accusing it of exploitation and violations of workers rights. From
June 2-Sept. 10 this year, 1,685 workers of the company, led by the Lepanto
Employees Union-Naflu-KMU, went on strike after a deadlock in the negotiations
for a new Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA). Their proposal for an increase
in wages and benefits was consistently denied by management.
As in the
2003 strike, peasant communities showed their firm support to striking workers.
International, national, and regional broad support was also shown in solidarity
with the striking workers, for genuine unionism, and against corporate greed and
domination. In the end, 19 union officers agreed to accept their dismissal in
exchange for the reinstatement of more than a thousand other workers. The 19
officers continue represent the workers in the ongoing CBA negotiations.
The Philex
Mining Corporation, on the other hand, has a partnership agreement with the
Anglo-American Mining Company based in South Africa. With mining investments all
over the world, it competes with BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto as the biggest
mining company worldwide. Anglo-American and Philex operate Northern Luzon
Exploration as a joint-venture. Anglo-American owns 50 percent of Philex Gold
and has interests on the 1,019 hectares of approved and ongoing applications of
Philex and Northern Luzon Exploration. As a partner of Philex, Anglo-American
shares over the 22,712 hectares covered by the contracts and applications of the
former for MPSA.
Philex is
being investigated by the Benguet provincial board for its forced decongestion
program and its refusal to allow the children of retrenched workers to enroll in
schools within the mine site.
Other than
Philex, Anglo-American solely owns and operates the Cordillera Exploration. On
top of the 27,804 hectares covered by its applications for EP in the provinces
of Apayao, Kalinga, Abra, Mountain Province, and Ifugao, Cordillera Exploration
has a single FTAA application covering 77,549 hectares within the provinces of
Abra, Mt. Province and Benguet in the Cordillera, and nearby Ilocos Sur
province. It has taken over this FTAA application previously owned by Newmont.
Other foreign mining companies with investments and interest in the Cordillera
are Terra Nova, Canadian mining company which owns most of Wolfland Resources,
and Oxiana of Australia. Northern Dispatch / Bulatlat
|
Table 1: List of
FTAA Applications |
|
Company |
Location |
Area in Has |
|
Cordillera
Exploration |
Benguet, Abra,
Mt. Prov., Ilocos Sur |
77,549.00 |
|
Lepanto
Consolidated Mining Co. |
Mankayan,
Kabayan, Benguet |
81,000.00 |
|
Shipside
Incorporated |
Kayapa, Bambang,
etc, Nueva Vizcaya |
81,000.00 |
|
Diamond Drilling
Corp of the Philippines |
Alilem, Suyo,
etc, Ilocos Sur |
81,000.00 |
|
Horizon
Resources Corp |
Atok, Kapangan,
etc. Benguet |
81,000.00 |
|
Patrick
Resources Corp |
Pinukpuk,
Salegseg, Kalinga |
81,000.00 |
|
Lindsay
Resources Corp |
Manabo, Bucay,
etc., Abra |
81,000.00 |
|
Mt. Franz Mining
Corp |
Mt. Province and
Kalinga |
79,836.60 |
|
Eltopan Resource
Corp |
Kabugao, Apayao
and Abra |
80,433.31 |
|
Olpaten
Resources Corp |
Kalinga, Apayao
and Abra |
75,078.04 |
|
Sagitarius Alpha
Realty Corp |
Kalanasan, Luna,
Kabugao, Apayao |
80,990.00 |
|
Source:
MGB Regional Office, CAR, 2005 |
|
Table 2: Mining
Applications per Province in the Cordillera |
|
PROVINCE |
APSA |
EXPA |
AFTA |
ISAG |
|
No. |
Area in Hectares |
No. |
Area in Hectares |
No. |
Area in Hectares |
No. |
Area in Hectares |
|
ABRA |
6 |
14,846 |
16 |
16,219 |
1 |
81,000 |
- |
- |
|
APAYAO |
1 |
972 |
7 |
63,158.24 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
BENGUET |
50 |
96,169.0016 |
5 |
12,261.0034 |
4 |
320,549 |
1 |
6.40 |
|
IFUGAO |
1 |
2,592 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
MT. PROVINCE |
3 |
9,756.3700 |
3 |
8,748.00 |
5 |
399,830.6037 |
- |
- |
|
KALINGA |
- |
- |
6 |
40,379.00 |
1 |
81,000 |
- |
- |
|
Source: MGB
Regional Office, CAR, 2005 |
|
Table 3: Locations
of Approved Applications |
|
PROVINCE |
TYPE OF PERMIT |
Number |
Hectares |
|
Benguet |
MPSA |
6 |
11,441.77 |
|
EP |
1 |
46.9894 |
|
ISAG |
4 |
53.50 |
|
Abra |
MPSA |
3 |
1,725.000 |
|
Kalinga |
EP |
1 |
498.5781 |
|
Source: MGB Regional Office, CAR,
2005 |
Cordillera – Still the Main Hub of Transnational Mining
First of three parts
Arroyo’s Priority
Mining Projects a Boon to TNCs
But small-scale miners will be
displaced
Conclusion
Related story:
Buaya Tribe Resists
Mineral Exploration
© 2005 Bulatlat
■
Alipato Publications
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