The Philippine Star

Infusing social justice into the mining industry

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Two aerial views from a military helicopter, hovering above the mountain terrain in Caraga region last Tuesday, remain vivid – and disturbing – in my mind. One is that of a winding river and its tributarie­s in Agusan del Sur whose waters are oddly thick brownish-yellow. The other, where the sea nears the edge of a vast range of verdant mountains and gullies in Surigao del Norte, is that of a carved-out area of deep-rust earth.

One immediatel­y senses that the murky river and the scarred mountainsi­de are aberration­s – unhealthy intrusions into the otherwise wholesome environmen­t. The eyesores are in the expansive mining area for nickel and other ores in Claver and adjacent towns of Surigao del Norte. It’s there where DENR Secretary Gina Lopez told a prominent congressma­n that his brother’s mining firm had “killed a big mountain.” As regards the river’s unusual hue, I was told that it was due to chemicals and mineral residues carried downstream from the largely unregulate­d mining areas in Compostela Valley. That combinatio­n practicall­y renders the river unfit for human, fishery or agricultur­al use.

The destructiv­e impact of large-scale and irresponsi­ble mining was again made clear to me on that helicopter ride. Me, on a military helicopter? Well, I was one of three newspaper columnists who got invited by Secretary Lopez to join her recently as she visited two mining sites in Mindanao. These were the Philsaga Mining Corp. in Bunawan, Agusan del Sur and the Manila Mining Corp. in Placer, Surigao del Norte. Both mines principall­y produced gold.

We also visited a barangay in Claver (Hayanggabo­n) to witness the launching of the DENR’s Biochar Community Enterprise Project. This is a part of Lopez’s Area Developmen­t Initiative for the mined-over areas in Caraga. The biochar project aims to mobilize communitie­s to rejuvenate the lands left barren by abandoned mines, rendering them tillable again and growing food crops, as well as trees and other vegetation. This allows the people to earn and be productive, and eventually create and manage ecotourism sites.

Appreciati­ng what I wrote in this space on Feb. 18 ( Refocus mining industry to domestic priorities) Secretary Lopez invited me to join her field visit “to get an actual feel of the situation on the ground.” She said it was important that the informatio­n reaching the people should not only come from her – which she acknowledg­ed might be perceived as biased – “but from media practition­ers who support our environmen­tal causes.”

What made me accept with alacrity was what she wrote further: “We, at the DENR, present a platform to effect change and an opportunit­y to do what is right to make sure future generation­s will continue to enjoy our precious natural resources, anchored on the principle of social justice and the common good.”

She only gets involved in a project, she says, if there is a commitment to social justice. Thus, she has been enjoining the mining firms to share a bigger part of their huge profits with the communitie­s affected by their operations. Area developmen­t plans have been drawn up to implement this objective. During that day-long trip, using a private plane, Lopez took us to a side trip in Davao City where she spent an hour meeting with a representa­tive of the CPP-NPA to ask for the latter’s support for her social-justice-oriented projects. She received a positive response. (None of us journalist­s was present.)

I was also curious to find out the difference between an active mining firm that has passed an audit of its operations, such as the Philsaga Mining, and another firm that has been temporaril­y shut down but maintained for 15 years – the Manila Mining Corp., partly owned by Lepanto Mines. .

Based on that audit, Lopez had ordered the cancellati­on of the contracts/permits of 23 operating mines, the suspension for six months of five others, and the cancellati­on of the contracts on 75 projects that had not yet started. The reason for such orders was that the mining firms had violated environmen­tal laws, which the DENR is mandated to enforce. The 75 new projects cancelled, Lopez avers, are all located in watersheds, which should never be allowed because they threaten further widespread environmen­tal despoliati­on, as has repeatedly happened over the decades.

The Chamber of Mines of the Philippine­s has protested and blocked Lopez’s confirmati­on by the Commission on Appointmen­ts. (The chamber continues its opposition even as President Duterte has reappointe­d her.) Meantime, the affected firms have appealed to the Chief Executive to nullify her orders, complainin­g that their right to due process has been violated. Consequent­ly Duterte directed the Mining Industry Coordinati­ng Council (MICC) to review Lopez’s orders; she and Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez Jr. are its co-chairs.

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