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State Of Emergency In The Peruvian Amazon

Posted by Michelle Moquin on June 6th, 2016

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Good Monday morning!

From Think Progress:

Gold Mining Has Devastated The Peruvian Amazon

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Aerial view taken from a police helicopter shows a jungle devastated by gold mining in an area known as La Pampa in Peru’s Madre de Dios region. Illegal wildcat mining has been ravaging pristine jungle and contaminating it with tons of mercury.

When Meraldo Umiña moved to the Madre De Dios region of Peru in 1983, the toxic gold rush that’s destroyed swaths of Amazon rainforest there was in its infancy. There were no laws regulating informal or illegal mining, and artisanal miners like him were few.

“Gold was cheap,” Umiña, 59, told ThinkProgress in Spanish — “a gram was about $12.” Using simple but still harmful chemical methods, miners worked just by the rivers then, and the gold was easy to get, he said. There was no need to encroach on the jungle, and no financial incentive to use machine-intensive techniques of extraction.

But as the 1980s waned and the 1990s rolled in, the Peruvian economy that had been in shambles improved as insurgency groups were defeated, and corrective macroeconomics took hold. Foreign markets turned their eyes on Peru. The price of gold gradually increased, Umiña said, and people from other areas of the country soon saw the same opportunity he had discovered years before and migrated to Madre de Dios. “People started to invade the lands of established residents,” he said, and “it was hard to control the labor.”

Yet land disputes were just the first bump that mining brought to the least populous department of Peru. Alluvial mining, in which small gold flecks are sifted out of sandy sediments deposited by runoff from the Andes over centuries, has now also caused a wide range of environmental harms that have reached catastrophic levels in one of the most biodiverse regions on the planet. Most miners in Madre de Dios use liquid mercury to extract gold from soils they explore with suction hoses, and during the purifying process, the mercury is burned off and at best recovered in water if miners have the equipment available. Mercury pollution contaminates soil, water, and air — and when it enters the human body, it can harm the brain, heart, kidneys, lungs, and immune system.

Now some four decades after mining moved into Madre de Dios, rivers are polluted, fish are toxic, people have elevated levels of mercury running through their blood, and deforestation is rampant, according to authorities and studies. Between 1999 to 2012, illegal mining in Madre de Dios went from less than 25,000 acres to more than 123,000. For perspective, one acre is roughly the size of a football field, which means large forests that served as biodiverse carbon sinks are instead greenhouse gas emitters thanks to mining machinery, all while soaking up toxic waste.

All reached for this story agree that a state of emergency issued last week for Madre de Dios is unlikely to alleviate a problem that’s been years in the making. The country is also poised for presidential elections in less than a week, and experts said any emergency plan will suffer from the uncertain policies of a new administration. Experts also agree that balancing the livelihood of informal miners versus the pressing need to end illegal mining will be a lengthy, cumbersome process as regional and national agendas often conflict with each other.

“The outlook is quite grim, and this probably won’t change in many years,” Gisselle Vila, social scientist and professor at the Catholic University of Peru, told ThinkProgress.

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This aerial photo shows a deforested area known as La Pampa, in Peru’s Madre de Dios region

Environmental degradation has been a problem in the Amazon for decades. But whereas before deforestation stemmed from poor subsistence farmers, now industrial activities like oil extraction and mining are playing a larger role in the world’s biggest rainforest. Attention on the topic has intensified in recent times in every Amazonian country facing the long-lasting effects of chemical pollution, particularly after the collapse of two dams in Brazil tainted the ecology of two states and caused the largest environmental disaster in Brazilian history.

For its part, Peru has been dealing with series of oil spills — most recently in the north of the Amazon — while in the south it’s tried to stifle illegal mining to no avail. In fact, mining pollution has become so severe that last week Peru declared a 60-day emergency to curtail mercury poisoning from illegal gold mining. “Forty-one percent of the population of Madre de Dios is exposed to mercury pollution,” Environment Minister Manuel Pulgar-Vidal said when announcing the move, Reuters reported. The government said it will give uncontaminated fish to residents, set up mobile health clinics and monitoring centers, and implement educational campaigns. There are also talks to start a massive reforestation plan, though all reached for this story doubt the emergency plan because of the presidential elections. President Ollanta Humala will leave office on July 28.

Like many administrations before, the incoming president will inherit thousands of informal miners like Umiña who may have lawfully leased lands but nonetheless live in a legal limbo since laws were introduced in 2002. Moreover, thousands of uncounted illegal miners live off protected wildlife areas, or pay natives to exploit ancestral lands like those that exist in Madre de Dios. Thus far, efforts to formalize procedures have failed and policing hasn’t fared much better. In February, more than 1,000 police and soldiers raided camps and dynamited and dismantled mining machinery valued at $3 million, the Associated Press reported. That raid came on the heels of many others, but Umiña, vice president of the Peruvian National Society Of Small Scale Mining (SONAMIPE), said illegal miners often know of the raids ahead of time and simply return to the camps once officials leave.

Illegal miners “have methods of communications, they have Internet, they have cell towers. As soon as police are leaving for the camps they know and prepare,” Umiña said. “We believe there is terrible corruption when it comes to policing.”

Formalizing miners has proved a daunting task plagued with bureaucratic hurdles since the idea was introduced almost three administrations ago. Part of the problem is that the government has used a uniform policy for all artisanal mining, experts said, when in fact, mining in Peru is different depending on the region. In the highlands mining mostly happens underground whereas in the rainforest it happens outdoors. As a result, the one-size-fits-all standard creates confusion or permitting tools simply don’t exist. For instance, getting a permit for tree logging is a requirement prior to mining, but Umiña said no agency gives out that permit. “The state doesn’t have the will to say who will authorize the land,” he said.

AP337275422187-816x529

Hundreds of police officers gather for the second day of an operation to eradicate illegal mining in the area known as La Pampa, in Peru’s Madre de Dios region in Aug. 2015.

Experts and activists reached agreed with Umiña. “There was no will,” Franco Arista, gold program manager for the nonprofit Solidaridad, told ThinkProgress in Spanish. He said about 70,000 artisanal miners have tried to formalize across Peru, but only 2,000 miners from the highland have succeeded. “None of those are in Madre de Dios,” he said.

Some studies suggest that at least 90 percent of gold mining in Madre de Dios is either illegal or informal, and note that dangerous mining practices now threaten other parts of Peru as the price of gold is generally on the rise. Through May, gold was over $1,200 per ounce. On a good day, a mining team of about 10 people in Madre de Dios can get about 45 grams (just over an ounce and a half). Some 87 percent of Peruvian gold goes to Switzerland and Canada, while the rest goes to the United States and Italy.

While much-needed revenue is moving into areas that would otherwise profit from agriculture, tourism and fishing, mining is bringing an added harm that’s making conservation and even public health more complicated. That’s because sustainable mining is difficult to achieve. On top of that, mercury is intertwined with gold mining, yet often miners mishandle the substance or simply disregard proper practices. Important “soils are being washed to extract gold,” said Arista. “Mining there needs extensive technical assistance.”

In the past 20 years, more than 3,000 tons of mercury have been dumped into Amazonian rivers, according to the Peruvian Society of Environmental Law. Moreover, some 78 percent in Madre de Dios, a region of more than 100,000 people, have elevated levels of mercury. Some natives even reportedly go over the safety levels by a factor of six.

Peru, the top gold-producing country in Latin America, has been unable to placate this mounting problem for multiple reasons, including business pressure. “In Peru, people can mine almost anywhere they want,” said Lenin Valencia, researcher at the Peruvian Society of Environmental Law. In part, the corporate mining lobby has pushed against laws that could hamper them while national politics have traditionally favor business and the market as a source for solutions and growth, Valencia told ThinkProgress.

However, other forms of politics are also at play. Vila, the social scientist, said pro-mining local governments and regional candidates are many times at odds with the central government — or have a different agenda altogether — causing “a divorce in their vision of development.” As a result, strong police actions become the only alternative to the lack of coordinated political solution, said Vila, who went on to add “policy should be less oriented towards criminalization and more towards flexibility.”

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The Tambopata River, which traverses the Tambopata National Reserve in Madre de Dios.

CREDIT: FLICKR/ESBUX

Experts and activists reached also said the emergency declaration seemed to be coming too late and didn’t include more funding for agencies to respond accordingly. “But it was necessary. I hope this is the beginning of more serious actions,” Valencia said. Yet whether swift actions will come before the environmental wound grows deeper is unclear, and for many, unlikely in the short term.

Presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori, the daughter of convicted President Alberto Fujimori, favors formalizing small-scale mining, but said she wants to start from scratch.

Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, who in polls is trailing the former Peruvian first lady by 5 percentage points, wants to continue the formalization process while creating a financing bank for miners who want to be environmentally friendly through better technology.

Umiña, the miner, is in the meantime taking matters into his own hands. He said he’s leading a small group of miners who want to be certified as environmentally friendly in buying equipment that extracts gold without the use of mercury, or even borax, which is a substance that can remove gold from soils while polluting less. Environmental mining means investing more time to extract the gold, Umiña said, but it’s the only way forward.

“We know that mercury is a toxic liquid that evaporates and accumulates in people and the environment, so we have to figure out a way to reach economic, environmental and social sustainability,” said Umiña, adding his group is reaching that goal. “And once that happens and others see us,” he said, “everybody will want to work like this.”

*****

Readers: I wish people had the foresight to see just how devastating their actions were before things become devastating. We seem to always be cleaning up the messes we make, and not just when they are small and manageable, but when they have escalated and gotten way out of hand…when damage is almost irreversible to the planet and its inhabitants.

After decades of using equipment that pollutes the environment, only now environmentally friendly equipment is being considered. When will we ever learn to prevent damage on the onset when it is first discovered instead of when it becomes a state of emergency?

Greed at the expense of the environment and human lives. Not much has changed with our behavior.

What’s your take? Blog me. 

Lastly, greed over a great story is surfacing from my “loyal”(?) readers. With all this back and forth about who owns what, that appears on my blog, let me reiterate that all material posted on my blog becomes the sole property of my blog. If you want to reserve any proprietary rights don’t post it to my blog. I will prominently display this caveat on my blog from now on to remind those who may have forgotten this notice.

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michelle

Aka BABE: We all know what this means by now :)

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35 Responses to “State Of Emergency In The Peruvian Amazon”

  1. Zhanna Says:

    The just keep destroying the planet for money they don’t even need. When will enough be enough for these people?

  2. Candice Says:

    Senseless is the only word that comes to mind.

  3. Eva Says:

    When this rain forest is destroyed, the rest of the world will suffer as much as us Peruvians.

  4. Vanessa Says:

    Greed is ruling the day.

  5. Maurice Says:

    People don’t pay attention to these types of things until it is too late to prevent the catastrophe.

  6. Baltasar Says:

    It takes a 40 tonne dump truck to make 1 wedding ring.

  7. Eréndira Says:

    Mining pollution has become so severe that last week Peru declared a 60-day emergency to curtail mercury poisoning from illegal gold mining.

  8. Cristóbal Says:

    On a good day, a mining team of about 10 people in Madre de Dios can get about 45 grams (just over an ounce and a half).

  9. Chay Says:

    HUEPETUHE, Peru In this wildcat gold mining town in the Peruvian Amazon, the boom is over. Vizarreta said he has long opposed Fujimori and the right-wing populist movement she has steered since her father and authoritarian former president Alberto Fujimori was imprisoned for crimes committed during his 1990-2000 government. Humala aggressively courted wildcat miners at the last election in 2011, helping him narrowly defeat Fujimori during her first presidential bid.

  10. Damario Says:

    Gold has a dirty underbelly, whether the horrific mercury poisoning in the Peruvian Amazon from small-scale mining, or the human rights abuses in northern Peru perpetuated by multinational mining companies. It works because of the crooked politicians like Fufimori.

  11. Pedro Says:

    Hoy agradezco en especial a fuerzas políticas,movimientos sociales, gremios y ciudadanos que se comprometieron activamente con la democracia

  12. Carlos Says:

    Fujimori says she will repeal laws aimed at protecting the environment that ban the use of dredges and heavy machinery by miners in rivers and wetlands. She is also offering miners cheap credit and tax exemptions while they form tax-paying businesses.

    The pledge is part of Fujimori’s strategy of locking in support from key groups by promising specific reforms, helping give her a lead of more than 5 percentage points over rival Pedro Pablo Kuczynski.

  13. Anonymous Says:

    ¡Estamos optimistas y le damos gracias al Perú por su apoyo!

  14. Dayanara Says:

    For those of you who don’t know who Keiko Fujimori is:

    Fujimori’s face is familiar to Peruvian voters.
    She was appointed as first lady for part of her father’s presidency after her parents divorced, and she was elected to Peru’s Congress in 2006.

  15. Cruze Says:

    Resultados al 92.6% de las actas procesadas de la Segunda Elección Presidencial

  16. Anonymous Says:

    Que mañana sea una fiesta por nuestra democracia y una victoria para el Perú. ¡Un fuerte abrazo!

  17. Ursula Says:

    Empiecen por la educación y cultura. Eso nos hará un mejor país. Educación la base de todo.
    1 retweet 14 likes

  18. Leslita Says:

    Tú estás no todo Lambayeque!
    0 retweets 1 like

  19. Ricardo Says:

    La tendencia sube cada dia mas. Hombres y mujeres con valores y creyentes de libertades se suman combatir corruptos.

  20. Dalena Says:

    PRESIDENTE ELECTO ganó la libertad y la democracia, perdiste Fujimori, Montesinos, SIN adiós la dinastía no pasó.

  21. Maria Says:

    Éxitos no conozco su gestión, más auguro por su perfil a un hombre integrado. Gracias desde Venezuela.

  22. Henry Says:

    English goddamn it. I don’t speak spanish or whatever that is.

  23. Mary Says:

    Henry,cállate la boca.

    English – shut the fuck up.

  24. Vinagrio Says:

    CLARO QUE SERÁ UNA FIESTA DEMOCRÁTICA, NO LO CONTRARIO COMO UD QUIERE ENGAÑAR AL PUEBLO, POR ESO DEMOCRÁTICAMENTE KEIKO GANARÁ!!!

  25. Renzo Says:

    vamos con todo Ppk…ojalá entienda la gente que luego de muchas decadas tenemos la oportunidad de votar x 1intelectual triunfador.

  26. Delora Says:

    Keiko Fujimori is the leading candidate in the national polls and the daughter of the former president of Peru. She is the leader of the conservative party Fuerza Popular. She ran for president in 2011 and lost. She hasn’t announced a substantial agenda yet, and her party hasn’t either.

    Pedro Pablo Kuczynski (also known as PPK) places second in most national polls. He is also a conservative-right politician. He was the Prime Minister of Peru in 2005, and is a well-known Peruvian economist. He ran for president in 2011 and came in third. He has proposed tax cuts for small- and medium-sized businesses and believes his policies will engender one million new jobs.

  27. Efenia Says:

    Michelle, tu blog es bien conocido aquí también. Gracias por darnos un foro para educar y para conversar sobre que no es censurado.

  28. Maria Says:

    Minería de oro es un tema central en esta elección. La selección de este artículo ha abierto nuevas discusiones. Sólo deseo que había sido más oportuna.

  29. Felicidad Says:

    Maria#27, mejor tarde que nunca

  30. Alycedale Says:

    Henry#21, do like the rest of us who do not speak Spanish or any other language printed on this blog. Google it if you are truly interested in what is being said.

  31. Louis Says:

    I’m ready to move on. It is 1PM here in Conn. What’s up Michelle?

  32. Martin Says:

    Louis#30, what’s up is this is obviously not the original Michelle. She hardly looks like the fine thing that was always on time and had a lot to say about what was going on on her blog.

  33. Trisha Says:

    Martin#31, give the girl a break. She dumped a husband, had to deal with threats to her way of life, and undoubtedly has a lot on her plate.

    She wants to effect a change on this planet, but she this blog isn’t her whole life. The regulars should step up and defend the cause(s).

  34. Mike,TM Says:

    I like the way you think Trisha#32. I’m back. No eqo, just saying. On the topic at hand. What can the people do if the government is bought and paid for by special interest?

    They can work as hard as they can to get the kind of political representation that will act in their behalf. I think we here in America are at that stage.

    The republican Congress is so owned by special interest that Obama was rendered practically useless. The lesson to be learned is that unless those same concerned people get out to vote in the off elections between the presidential ones and vote to give POTUS a supporting cast in the House and Senate, nothing will change.

    So, yes support Hilary and the current democratic field for Congress and governors. But also just as important is the off elections for the House and Senate in the coming 2 years.

  35. Michelle Moquin's "A day in the life of…" » Blog Archive » Tuesday Talk & Super Tuesday Too Says:

    […] Efenia: Since most of the comments made yesterday were in Spanish, I couldn’t resist translating yours. You are very welcome. Happy to hear that. Deseandote lo mejor! (I hope that is correct. :) […]