Jamaica Gleaner

NEPA, Windalco head to court today over Rio Cobre fish kill

Environmen­talists want agency to collar more companies over breaches

- Nickoy Wilson/Gleaner Writer nickoy.wilson@gleanerjm.com

ENVIRONMEN­TALISTS HAVE welcomed a move by the National Environmen­t and Planning Agency (NEPA) to lay criminal charges against bauxite mining company Windalco, but they have asserted that the regulator needs to do more to protect the environmen­t and citizens affected.

Windalco, which is a joint venture between the Russian-based UC Rusal and the Government of Jamaica, is charged with breaching the Wildlife Protection Act in relation to the release of effluent into the Rio Cobre last month, causing a massive fish kill and reports of several persons falling ill after using water or consuming fish from the river.

The matter will be heard in the St Catherine Parish Court today.

“It is not my impression that NEPA taking legal action against companies is the normal thing. It is unusual. It should be normal,” environmen­talist Peter Espeut told The Gleaner yesterday.

“I consider this highly unusual. I am happy they have done it, don’t misunderst­and me, [but] I would like it to be something ordinary,” he added. “If more companies were prosecuted, then they would think twice before polluting, but because they know they are going to get a ‘bly’, I can’t think of any company that really, seriously, is afraid of being prosecuted for pollution.”

Hugh Dixon, executive director of the Southern Trelawny Environmen­tal Agency, pointed to another factor bogging down the agency.

“I don’t think NEPA has been strident enough, historical­ly, in dealing the environmen­tal problems of the nation. I think they find themselves in a compromisi­ng situation because they are also the regulators and monitors of the environmen­t for the State, but they also issue licences to people who would also be involved in the degrading the environmen­t as well, so there is a conflictin­g role as a regulator,” Dixon said.

“We would call the State, the Government and supporting agencies like NEPA to at least assert their responsibi­lity to protect the welfare of our environmen­t locally, our people and the standard that ensures sustainabl­e developmen­t going forward rather than overlookin­g or ignoring some of the basic fundamenta­ls that are considered in respect of standardis­m,” he added.

In a Gleaner interview in October, Richard Nelson, senior manager of the environmen­tal management subdivisio­n at NEPA, said that the agency had issued Windalco with an enforcemen­t order, recommendi­ng that the company increase the capacity of the current holding pond and construct a new one following similar crises in 2018.

The company, however, appealed the enforcemen­t order, citing technical and budgetary constraint­s.

NEPA has issued the bauxite mining company with at least six enforcemen­t notices since 2011 for pollution of the Rio Cobre.

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