The Star Early Edition

Mayor concerned over water use stops mine restart

- Bloomberg

BHP BILLITON and Vale’s crippled Samarco mine, once the world’s second-largest producer of ironore pellets, has a new obstacle threatenin­g to slow its much-anticipate­d restart: a small-town mayor.

The Brazilian city of Santa Barbara declined to sign off last week on a plan for Samarco to continue to use water from a nearby river. Without the approval, Samarco won’t be able to complete an ongoing environmen­tal study required by state regulators for a restart, a person familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified because the matter is private.

“There are environmen­tal impacts related to the water supply that need to be thoroughly studied,” Leris Braga, the 34-year-old mayor of the town of 30 000 people in Minas Gerais state, said. He is calling for a separate study to be done to test for possible disruption­s to water flow.

The Samarco Mineração joint venture has been shut since a November 2015 tailings dam ruptured, polluting waterways in two states and killing as many as 19 people in an incident called Brazil’s worst environmen­tal disaster.

The closing also has left thousands without jobs and prompted Samarco to stop paying interest on $2.2 billion (R29.55bn) in bond obligation­s.

Melbourne-based BHP, Rio de Janeiro-based Vale and Samarco have all stopped short of providing an exact estimate for the mine’s restart, only saying they hope to return to operations some time this year. Last week, Brazil’s mines and energy minister Fernando Coelho Filho said the mine could be operationa­l in two months.

Even if Samarco resolves Braga’s objections, the mine will probably only be able to complete the environmen­tal-impact study needed for an operating licence by July at the earliest, the person said. If Braga’s dispute can’t be resolved, the study’s completion date could be delayed even further, making the likelihood of a restart this year more difficult.

Samarco is providing all the necessary informatio­n to the city of Santa Barbara and the company is taking all suitable steps to resolve the situation as soon as possible, a spokesman said on Thursday.

Regardless of Braga, once Samarco is able to complete the required study, it must then submit it to the state regulator overseeing the company’s re-licensing. Then public hearings will need to be held before the regulator performs a final assessment required before the license can be put to a vote.

“A restart of operations is technicall­y feasible in 2017,” BHP said on Thursday. But the “restart will occur only if it is safe to do so and the necessary approvals are received from Brazilian authoritie­s.”

Vale’s press office declined to comment. – Bloomberg

The company (Samarco) is taking all suitable steps to resolve the situation as soon as possible.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? BHP Billiton’s office in Perth, Western Australia. The Brazilian city of Santa Barbara has declined to sign off on a plan for BHP Bikkiton and Vale-owned Samarco to continue to use water from a nearby river.
PHOTO: REUTERS BHP Billiton’s office in Perth, Western Australia. The Brazilian city of Santa Barbara has declined to sign off on a plan for BHP Bikkiton and Vale-owned Samarco to continue to use water from a nearby river.

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