New environment minister says mining, nature, can coexist
MANILA: The Philippines’ new environment minister said it was possible to strike a balance between mining and protecting natural resources, but added that he needed time to assess mine closures ordered by his dismissed predecessor.
President Rodrigo Duterte this week named Roy Cimatu as replacement for staunch environmentalist Regina Lopez, a move welcomed by miners in the world’s top nickel ore producer but opposed by green groups who said he does not have a track record in conservation.
“There are countries where mining contributes a lot to the economy and environmentalists are not screaming,” Mr Cimatu said yesterday.
“I think it can be done ... [balancing preservation of ] the environment and responsible mining.”
Mr Cimatu’s next steps will be closely watched by nickel markets for clues on whether the government will boost or constrict supply of the metal, shipped to destinations such as China to churn out stainless steel.
A former military man who briefly headed the Philippine armed forces in 2002, Mr Cimatu said he has yet to take a position on decisions made by Ms Lopez, including her orders to shut more than half the country’s mines and cancel contracts for undeveloped mines to protect water resources.
“I will not take any action on things that I haven’t seen or read or reviewed. I will look at them first,” he said.
Ms Lopez was removed from her post last week by a panel of lawmakers that scrutinise Mr Duterte’s appointments, ending the 10-month mining crackdown she waged in a bid to better protect the environment.
Ms Lopez in February ordered 22 of 41 operating mines to close permanently and in April banned open-pit mining.
The 70-year-old Mr Cimatu earlier yesterday said he could allow mining in the country as long as it was done responsibly, taking a more moderate stance than Lopez.
He said his past experience with environmental protection was mainly during his days in the military when soldiers helped villagers in planting trees and keeping rivers clean.
Mr Duterte has said he met Mr Cimatu in Davao City in the country’s south many years ago, when he was mayor there.
Before Monday’s appointment, Mr Duterte last month named Mr Cimatu as a special envoy to help overseas Philippine worker refugees, a role that Mr Cimatu also played during the administration of former
President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo when he helped repatriate Filipinos caught in the 2003 Iraq war.
Mr Cimatu was surprised by his latest appointment, saying he was in the presidential palace on Monday to sort out details of a planned trip to South Korea to help Filipinos there amid rising tensions in the Korean Peninsula.
“I wasn’t expecting it. But [Duterte] knows I’m very willing to serve the country in any capacity.