Kuwait Times

Miners protest Philippine plan to cancel 75 contracts

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Mining firms in the Philippine­s voiced outrage yesterday over government plans to cancel nearly one quarter of the nation’s contracts, plus a permit to exploit one of the world’s largest known copper deposits. Environmen­t Secretary Gina Lopez announced Tuesday she would cancel 75 of the nation’s 311 mining contracts, as well as the environmen­tal compliance certificat­e of the planned $5.9-billion Tampakan copper and gold project. The Chamber of Mines of the Philippine­s said it would fight Lopez’s decision, warning it threatened $22-billion worth of projects.

The contracts are for projects in the pipeline but are not yet operating. “She’s out to kill the industry. We do not see a future for us under her,” Ronald Recidoro, the chamber’s vice president for legal and policy affairs, said. “Her announceme­nt was bloody in all aspects.” Lopez, appointed by President Rodrigo Duterte last year, has railed against what she insists are the environmen­tally destructiv­e and exploitati­ve practices of local and foreign miners in the Philippine­s. “Water is life. If you put at risk the water supply of the community there, you are putting at risk the quality of life of the people,” Lopez said on Tuesday.

This month Lopez also ordered the closure of 23 existing mines and the suspension of five others, saying they illegally encroached on watersheds, leaked waste into rivers and destroyed trees. The Philippine­s is the world’s top supplier of nickel ore and main exporter to China, and the government actions have impacted global metal prices. Lopez said Tuesday mining companies would be given seven days to explain before the cancellati­on of the 75 contracts were carried out. However the mining industry has warned it will take all legal measures to fight Lopez’s moves, which are widely expected to be brought before the Supreme Court.

Mining firms accused Lopez of breaching contracts and asked congress on Tuesday to reject her confirmati­on as environmen­t secretary. The Tampakan copper-gold project in the southern Philippine­s had already been stalled by regulation hurdles, including a local government ban on open-pit mining. Recidoro warned Tuesday’s announceme­nt would be a huge blow for the local economy. “This will lead to the loss of what will probably be the biggest employer in the area,” Recidoro said.—AFP

 ??  ?? MANILA: This file photo shows miners pushing a trolley as they enter a cooperativ­e mining site in the village of Mt. Diwata, Monkayo town, Compotela valley on the southern island of Mindanao.—AFP
MANILA: This file photo shows miners pushing a trolley as they enter a cooperativ­e mining site in the village of Mt. Diwata, Monkayo town, Compotela valley on the southern island of Mindanao.—AFP

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