Jamaica Gleaner

There is no Cockpit Country confusion

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THE EDITOR, Madam

Mark Wignall, in his article in The Sunday Gleaner of November 14,writes critically of the Jamaica Environmen­t Trust’s (JET) position on bauxite mining in the area left out of the Cockpit Country Area Proposed for Protection (CCAPP), tossing around accusation­s like “never compromisi­ng” and “tilting at windmills ”without stating what JET’s position is or engaging with any of its arguments. For the record, here are JET’s positions:

• JET welcomed the declaratio­n of the CCAPP in 2017, as it was a long overdue first step to the protection of the area known as Cockpit Country, while pointing out that important areas in the northeast and south had been left out.

• In the following four years, JET has continued its advocacy to include inside the CCAPP the northeaste­rn region, which is now the subject of a proposed new mining lease, SML 173, on the following grounds:

– That the landforms in this area are cockpit karst

– That the place names show they are part of Cockpit Country’s extraordin­ary history

– That t he area contains important historical, cultural and archaeolog­ical assets which will be put at risk by bauxite mining.

– That the area connects to the vast undergroun­d water resource of Cockpit Country that supplies 40 per cent of Jamaica’s fresh water needs, and that proposed bauxite mining in the watershed protection area of a major river, the Rio Bueno, presents a risk to that resource.

– That the projection­s for the impact of the climate crisis on Jamaica includes a significan­t reduction in the availabili­ty of fresh water.

– That although the bauxite industry is approximat­ely 70 years old, no in depth attempt has ever been made to quantify its costs in comparison to its benefits, and that JET’s own research, presented in a substantia­l study called RED DIRT, released in 2020, demonstrat­es that the full costs of bauxite mining far outweigh the benefits.

– That over the life of this industry, there has only been one serious health impact study commission­ed by the GOJ, and the harm that continues to be done to the health and quality of life of those who live in proximity to mining and processing remains ignored.

– That many (but not all) of the people who live in the rural communitie­s of Stewart Town, Madras, Gibraltar, Endeavour and others, some already being affected by bauxite mining under earlier permits and leases, value their rural livelihood­s and do not want bauxite mining. Others accept the paltry sums offered by the industry for the sacrifice of their personal health, celebrate minor contributi­ons such as the painting of a school or the constructi­on of a playing field on mined areas. Still, others feel powerless and state they have given up the fight and will take what they can get from the bauxite companies. Others have chosen to either leave the area or simply migrate from Jamaica.

Additional­ly, though the CCAPP was declared in 2017, it has still not been designated a protected area. Therefore, it is still not protected under law.

At no point has JET been against economic developmen­t or progress. We have, however, been advocating that economic developmen­t must not come at any cost, to either the environmen­t or to human health.

We would greatly appreciate thoughtful engagement with these arguments without the type of innuendo and mudslingin­g contained in Mr Wignall’s column.

THERESA RODRIGUEZ-MOODIE

CEO, Jamaica Environmen­t Trust jamaicaenv­ironmenttr­ust@gmail.com

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