This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VI, No. 1, February 5-11, 2006
UP Study Finds Toxic
Metals in Rapu-Rapu Mine Spill
Sediments near the mine
tailings spillage in Rapu-Rapu Island, Albay province were found to contain not
just cyanide but also heavy metals namely, mercury, lead, cadmium, chromium, and
arsenic, which are poisonous to humans and the environment.
By Dennis Espada
Bulatlat
Sediments near the mine tailing spillage in
Rapu-Rapu Island, Albay province (some 550 kms from Manila) were found to
contain not just cyanide but also heavy metals that are poisonous to humans and
the environment.
A laboratory analysis conducted by the
Environmental Engineering Unit of the National Engineering Center of the
University of the Philippines in Quezon City revealed that all sediment samples
are “acidic” and tested positive for the presence of mercury, lead, cadmium,
chromium and arsenic, among others. The findings were presented to the media
last February 1,
The island-municipality hosts the Rapu-Rapu
Polymetallic Project operated by the Australian transnational firm Lafayette
Mining Limited—flaunted as the Macapagal-Arroyo government’s “flagship” project
to revitalize the mining industry.
The UP study was commissioned by the Center for
Environmental Concerns-Philippines (CEC), an ecological research organization
that led a fact-finding team last Nov. 12-13 to probe the ecological
implications of Lafayette’s mining operations in Rapu-Rapu. The team visited the
island’s Barangay Binosawan and collected at least 34 sediment samples from
ponds where water was believed to have flowed from the mine site. The group also
took samples of the remaining mine tailings from the tailings pond to the
shoreline.
Last October 11 and 31, mine wastes contaminated
with cyanide spilled to the sea allegedly triggering a fish kill. The Department
of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) then slapped Lafayette a fine of
P10.7 million in violation of the Clean Water Act early last month.
However, the study revealed that the water was
contaminated not only by cyanide. Tests revealed a sediment sample that stores
mercury at 0.999 part per million (ppm) was found near one of the spots where
the spillage took place. This is way beyond the government’s allowable standard
of 0.20 ppm for disposal of industrial wastes.
CEC researcher Januar Ong said that the study
contradicted Lafayette’s claims that it was not using mercury in its operations.
“Hindi dahilan ang hindi paggamit ng minahan ng
mercury kung bakit nagkaroon ng mas mataas na lebel ng
mercury sa mga isda sa panukatan ng gobyerno
dahil ang naturang mercury ay natural na nananatili sa ilalim ng lupa at/o sa
mga bato. Dahil sa pagmimina ng Lafayette, ang malawakang paghuhukay, nailabas
ang mga ito at dumaloy kasama ng mine tailings patungong sapa at dagat,”
(The company cannot argue that it does not use mercury in its mining operations
to escape responsibility for the high levels of mercury found in fishes. In the
course of its diggings, Lafayette unearths mercury, which is naturally found in
certain areas in the soil and rocks, causing it to flow with the mine tailings
towards streams and the sea.) Ong said.
Lafayette is using the “cyanide leaching
method”, a rapid manner of extracting gold from the ore, Ong explained.
The UP study, he said, also validates an earlier
study made by the Ateneo de Naga University’s Institute of Environmental
Conservation and Research (Inecar), which revealed the occurrence of acid mine
drainage (AMD) in the area. AMD is polluted water with high levels of iron,
aluminum and sulfuric acid that appears yellow-orange in color.
He also pointed out that the said metals are
natural parts of rocks excavated for mining. If these were brought to the
surface, he said, it could leak or mix with any type of water, including the
residents’ drinking source.
Andy Salatan, an instructor from UP’s Institute
of Chemistry, said that mercury is a neuro-toxin that can induce cancer, brain
damage and abortion among pregnant women. Cadmium destroys the bones and
internal organs, while lead can break up the central nervous system. He thinks
it is possible for humans to ingest these metals by eating marine animals like
fish and shrimps that are caught within contaminated areas. “Actually, ang
mga metals na ‘to, tinanggal na sa mga experiments ng General Chemistry
dahil sa kanilang mga epekto (These metals have been removed from
experiments in General Chemistry because of its effects),” he said.
Following the release of CEC’s report,
environmentalists and mine-affected people’s organizations has accelerated their
demand for the permanent closure of Lafayette’s mining operations in Rapu-Rapu.
The anti-corporate mining alliance called Defend
Patrimony! (Movement Against Globalization of Mining Industry, Plunder and
Destruction) urged Lafayette to immediately rehabilitate the affected areas,
provide medical assistance and compensate the people of Rapu-Rapu for loss of
income due to the mining operations and mine spill.
Just recently, the group has found an ally among
leaders of the Roman Catholic Church. In its pastoral letter last January 29,
the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) appealed to the
government to stop the 24 large-scale mining projects and to scrap the Mining
Act of 1995, a law that place the country’s mineral resources under foreign
control and exploitation.
Deploring the Macapagal-Arroyo administration’s
efforts to pressure and co-opt the CBCP into reversing its stand against
large-scale mining, Trixie Concepcion, spokesperson of Defend Patrimony! stated,
“What the people want is a mining policy that is geared towards national
industrialization and genuine development, which guarantees environmental
protection and respects human rights.” “We are not against mining
per se. What we are opposing is the liberalization of mining…the environmental
tragedies now taking place far outweigh the claimed benefits of corporate mining
in the country,” Kalikasan-People’s Network for the Environment (KPNE) national
coordinator Clemente Bautista Jr. said. Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
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Alipato Publications Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified. Poisonous metals
Against large-scale mining