The sad reality is that the only way for superior mining methods to be deployed is to have it done with a foreign company who brings in industrial expectations and skills as well. That also means that non tax paying artisan miners who pollute severely are pushed out and the mine is developed to modern standards. This is surely not a bad exchange.
Mining has opened up globally and every jurisdiction wants to get lucky. The real payback is in the form of an advanced community and infrastructure in that one part of any country that likely would never have been improved.
All mines are mined out in most of twenty years. It is never a sustainable resource. Thus all that infrastructure goes back to the community and the country as usable assets.
Looming Mining ‘Tsunami’ Set to Take Africa by Storm
John C. Cannon
http://www.wakingtimes.com/2014/08/23/looming-mining-tsunami-set-take-africa-storm/
As nations invest billions in extraction development, forests may suffer big losses.
Many of the minerals that enable
our technology, back the value of our economies (or did at one time),
and power our cities can be found in Africa. And yet the continent still
remains something of an untapped resource, as the vast majority of
mineral extraction occurs elsewhere. A new report published by a team of
scientists from James Cook University in Cairns, Australia, documents a
surging tide of foreign interest in mining in Africa and cautions that
the sector’s unchecked development and expansion could devastate the
environment.
In a “call to arms” for conservation biologists, NGOs, and
governments to guide this investment to both encourage economic
development and safeguard natural habitat, author Bill Laurance and his
colleagues catalogue known mineral deposits and examine where they
converge with biodiverse areas. As much as a quarter of the continent’s
mineral wealth is concentrated in three areas in Cameroon, Gabon and the
Democratic Republic of Congo. The map below shows one of these mineral
hotspots along the Rift Mountains in eastern Congo, where they overlap
with areas of forest loss between 2001 and 2013.
“In the coming 50 years, this will be one of the most important environmental issues on the planet,” Laurance told mongabay.com.
Rapidly growing countries such as Russia, India, Brazil and China, as
well as established, industrialized including Canada and Australia,
have plowed billions into mining developments in Africa in recent years.
In 2009 China alone invested more than $100 billion each year in
mineral extraction, a four-fold increase since the turn of the century.
According to data from Global Forest Watch, between 2001 and 2013 alone
the DRC lost more than 5.8 million hectares of forest – a swath of land
larger than the Netherlands.
The study’s authors point out the enormous opportunity afforded by
this influx of cash. Mines can provide much-needed employment, and
accompanying infrastructure development in the form of roads and rail
lines could help connect farmers to markets, incentivizing increased
agricultural yields and encouraging higher incomes through participation
in national and regional economies.
“One can’t ignore all of the potential positive aspects of foreign
investment,” Laurance said. But while mining could be a booster shot for
struggling economies in tropical Africa, it’s not the panacea that some
purport it to be. “The social advantages can be very spotty, and there
can be major environmental impacts,” he added.
The act of mining itself can be detrimental to the environment, as it
is often necessary to remove forest and other types of habitat to get
at the minerals in the ground. The authors of the report note a
worrisome trend known as PADDD – short for “protected area downgrading,
downsizing and degazettement” – in which governments trim down parks and
reserves or scale back their protected status to allow mining companies
easier access to minerals. PADDD is often a symptom of weak governance,
a serious problem afflicting many countries in sub-Saharan Africa.
Laurance has also called for strengthening environmental impact
assessments, which companies are typically required to carry out before
mineral extraction begins. “The environmental impact assessment process
is in many cases very inadequate,” he said, often just focused on the
narrow set of impacts that occur in the immediate area of the mines and
only for the time when a company in actively working to pull minerals
from the ground. But, Laurance added, a huge set of knock-on effects
from the development of mines can have potentially even more serious
environmental side effects than the mines themselves.
Roads present one of the most significant issues. While many of the
African countries where minerals are abundant are in dire need of
infrastructure improvements to move goods to market and allow the freer
movement of people, roads also open previously inaccessible wildlife
habitats to a variety of other human uses. In one case, a proposed road
aimed at moving gold from areas around Lake Victoria to the coast will
cut right through Serengeti National Park, disrupting perhaps the most
iconic animal migration on the planet. Mines also draw in people looking
for jobs, Laurance and his coauthors wrote. Once in the vicinity, the
established pattern says they’ll clear land for their homes and crops
and diminish local wildlife populations with bush meat hunting.
In addition, some locals, seeking to benefit from the mineral wealth
just like the companies in the vicinity, may start their own small-scale
mining operations, known as artisanal mining. Unlike small-scale oil
palm production, which can represent a more sustainable alternative to
large plantations, one-off mines can be just as deleterious (if not more
so) to the environment than their industrial counterparts. According to
the study, ad-hoc miners use “unregulated, improvised and often harmful
extraction methods to piggyback onto operations involving precious
commodities, especially gold.” One of these methods is the use of
mercury to separate the ore from its surrounding rocky matrix, which can
quickly contaminate local water supplies and harm fish, wildlife and
humans.
In many ways, the land rush to
extract valuable minerals found in so many of the products we use every
day, from cell phones to jewelry to electrical wiring, parallels the
rush to invest in oil palm in tropical Africa. At once representing
unparalleled economic opportunities and the specter of environmental
devastation, oil palm and mineral extraction both need careful
regulation and the incorporation of the needs of local populations into
the formation of strategies that will protect the environment and
provide for the countries where this development is occurring. For
mining and oil palm, scientists like Laurance are calling for greater
transparency.
“We need to be talking about it much more vigorously than we are
right now,” he added. Additionally, he and his colleagues insist that
it’s imperative to strengthen the governance structures of these
countries to ensure that mining development is carried out in a
sustainable way.
But Laurance points out that the struggle to exert pressure on mining
companies may be more difficult. With oil palm, consumers and NGOs have
been able to get no-deforestation commitments from large companies by
calling for more transparent supply chains and better labeling. With
minerals, it’s not so easy, Laurance said. “All this stuff goes into a
gazillion different products,” many of which we’ve come to depend on in
our modern lives.
As consumer demand soars for products that depend on these minerals, so will the demand for the land that holds them.\
“It’s a bit of a tsunami. What can one do against a tsunami?” he
said. Still, he’s not willing to give up. “We have to try to do
something.”
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