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Tambogrande gold mine

The Canadian Manhattan Mineral Corporations is planning to construct an open pit mine using cyanide based technologies in the Peruvian Valley of San Lorenzo.

tambogrande

new! peruvian farmers vote against gold mine


Project overview
World Bank Group involvement
Environmental and social concerns
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Project Overview


The Canadian Manhattan Mineral Corporations is planning to construct an open pit mine using cyanide based technologies in the Peruvian Valley of San Lorenzo. The 10-year project is estimated at $US 240 million. The company is currently awaiting the release of the Environmental Impact Assessment.

In the early eighties, a state owned corporation called Minero Peru started prospecting in the valley's grounds and discovered several valuable metals, among which gold. In '99, the Peruvian government declared the exploitation of these gold reserves a ´public necessity´. This overruled a national security law (Art 71) that no foreign entity was allowed to own any land within 50 km of the national borders, while Tambogrande is situated about 35 km from Ecuador. Manhattan Minerals Corporation bought the concessions. Tambo Grande is the only project of this otherwise unknown corporation.

Godofredo García Baca, respected agronomist and enlightened resistance leader, opposed any mining activities immediately in protection of the valley's agriculture and biodiversity. The valley is very fertile. As a result of a successful irrigation project, partly financed by the World Bank, the valley has turned from a dry desert into an area that produces almost all of Peru´s famous lemons. It is the main mango and lime oil exporting region. It provides about 20,000 people with sustainable livelihoods. This has led people from all over Peru to move to the desert valley and start a new life there. The areanowadays has the rich biodiversity of the rare 'dry tropics' or 'trópico seco'. It is a green, very fertile area where people say: ´Nobody here is rich, but there are no poor either´.

Tambogrande is an emblematic case of local villagers standing up for the right to choose their own development model. Farmers of the valley fiercely defend their agriculture against the planned gold mine. On 27 and 28 of February 2001 there was a total strike and massive mobilization in Tambogrande demanding Manhattan to retire. Soon after, the encampments of the corporation were torn to pieces. The police sent helicopters. In March 2001, Godofredo García Baca was murdered. To date this crime has not been resolved.

The citizens of Tambogrande organized a people´s referendum on June 2nd 2002. People came in their best clothes to vote. An overwhelming 98% of the voters declared they do not want the mine in their valley. "In our opinion, the municipal consultation in Tambogrande was conducted in a free, democratic and transparent manner, allowing citizens the opportunity to express their opinion through secret ballot with the effective guarantee that the votes would be counted
correctly," said two observers from Canada (read their observation mission report ).

Local villagers say that Manhattan has brought ´sticks, fire, police and violence´ and is perforating the surroundings of the city. The whole project however, is in an impasse because the community does not allow Manhattan to enter the village to do any studies. Manhattan said it will contract an independent institution to undertake the studies. The baseline study it has already done, is completely inadequate, if judged by Canadian and US criteria.

An astonishing aspect toTambo Grande that considerably magnifies the pressure on the government to develop the mine, is the picture of interests. It appears that many more projects are planned and linked to the approval of the Tambo Grande mine, including a smelter, a phosphate project and a fertilizer plant. Together, these are estimated to entail investments of about $ 2 billion.

Click on the images below to view the full size photos

voting in the people's referendum banner on referendum day people take to the streets
memorial service for godofredo garcia baca speech at memorial service for godofredo garcia river crossing

World Bank Group involvement

Manhattan Minerals Corporation stated in an interview in Piura that it will approach the World Bank Group for financial support as soon as the environmental impact studies are done. World Bank support would mean major policy incoherence, as it would be in full contradiction with the purpose of its earlier irrigation project.

environmental and social concerns

The Tambo Grande open pit mine is likely to have negative, long-term impacts on water quality and quantity, the general environment and agriculture. The baseline study on environmental impacts done by the company is completely inadequate when judged by criteria for opening a mine in Canada or the US.

The mine would strip the village of Tambo Grande and displace a large part of its population. What local residents fear most is the destruction of the agriculture and the sustainable livelihoods that they have so carefully built up.

Groundwater and superficial water from the Piura river would be used on a massive and uncontrollable scale. Downstream water is likely to become contaminated with metals and dust from the activities at the mine. People do not believe that Tambo Grande will use a closed circuit water system that works.

Water pollution at the site is likely. The waters from the tailings are likely to contain high concentrations of metals, cyanide, other toxic non-metals and possibly radioactivity. It is very well possible that the soil at the site contains extremely dangerous materials like plutonium, that would be freed by the explosions.

Strong winds in the area, as a result of deforestation for the mine, could cover the valley and its houses, schools, waters and fields with dangerous contaminating dust from the explosions. Winds of 35 km/h have been measured.

Heavy rains caused by the El Niño phenomenon could flood the 350 m deep toxic pit and spread metals and chemicals throughout the valley. Tambogrande is the center of the El Niño phenomenon in the region. During the ´98 El Niño, the level of the Piura river raised more than three meters in one night. ´El Niño has become uncontrollable´, local people say.

All this means a significant threat for humans, animals, fish and crops in an area of highly valuable agricultural production. People are strongly united and convinced that they do not want the mine or any activity related to it: They are aware of the potential of their agriculture. They are prepared to give their lives in protection of the valley, its biodiversity and their sustainable development. Therefore, they oppose even any environmental studies. As long as the murder has not been resolved, they feel they have nothing to discuss with the company.

Another important problem with the project is the conflict of interest of the Peruvian government. It owns 25% of the project and is therefore both regulator and beneficiary at the same time. Thus, it might be tempted to avoid enforcing environmental requirements that prove too costly. Such arrangements have resulted in similar problems at other mine sites such as the Kumtor Mine in Kyrgyz Republic.

At the same time, the project would create only a few hundred jobs for the 10 year duration of the project, according to the company.

Read more

Asociacion Civil Labor (FoE Peru) at labor.org.pe
Oxfam America at www.oxfamamerica.org
Frente de Defensa de Tambogrande at www.geocities.com/frentetambogrande
Factor Tierra at www.geocities.com/factortierra
Vida y Agro at www.geocities.com/vidayagro
Conacami at www.conacamiperu.org

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