The Borneo Post

Czech gold deposits make foreign prospector­s drool

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PRAGUE: Czech gold deposits are whetting the appetites of foreign prospector­s hoping to see the new government lift a mining moratorium in the aftermath of snap elections.

But rather than a dream come true, the prospect of a gold rush is a nightmare for environmen­talists and residents of the hilly region south of the capital Prague, a popular resort area that holds the biggest deposit.

“No one wants an opencast mine here, in this wonderful natural setting near the Vltava river,” says Jiri Stastka, mayor of the central village of Chotilsko.

A few hundred metres from the village, the Vesely Vrch wooded hill — or Merry Hill — and its surroundin­gs conceal around 140 tonnes of the precious metal worth an estimated 100 billion koruna ( 3.7 billion euros, US$ 5 billion).

Known as the Mokrsko deposit, this is just over a quarter of the Czech Republic's estimated 380 to 400 million tonnes of gold, which is around one per cent of the globe's deposits.

But locals fear irreversib­le environmen­tal damage, particular­ly the pollution of groundwate­r since toxic cyanide is used in the extraction of gold.

“The hill would become a hole 200 metres deep, whose bottom would lie below the river. Cyanide is dangerous for the environmen­t, one can never rule out an accident due to the human factor,” Stastka told AFP.

Astur Bohemia, the Czech subsidiary of Canada's Astur Gold, recently applied for a five- year licence to exploit minerals in the containing two grammes of gold per tonne in the deposit.

It is one of five companies queued up for gold mining permits from the Czech environmen­t ministry.

Others include Delta Bohemia, a branch of Delta Gold Corporatio­n, headquarte­red in Vancouver, Canada, with operations in California and Australia and local Czech company GTS Potamon.

Gold mining in the lands now comprising the Czech Republic stretches back two millennia. It flourished between the first to third centuries under the Celts and then again with Slavs in the 14th century.

But standing in its way now is a moratorium on gold mining, which the government imposed in the 1990s in response to similar requests by foreign prospector­s.

“No gold deposit is currently being exploited in the Czech Republic,” industry ministry spokesman Filip Matys told AFP.

Prospector­s are now betting on the next government — a likely coalition of the left-wing Social Democrats, the populist ANO movement and the centrist Christian Democrats — lifting the moratorium.

“The cyanide-based technology is used without problem worldwide, for instance in New Zealand,” said Astur Bohemia spokeswoma­n Olga Bubnikova, adding that “the process occurs in a closed circuit, in double-shell tubs”.

She also spoke of the ‘great economic potential' of the Mokrsko deposit, which ‘could benefit not only the company but also the Czech state and the region.'

By law the cash-strapped Czech state could receive up to a tenth of the value of recovered deposits.

“(Astur Bohemia) has promised us wonders, but we prefer to live without its money and leave the gold to future generation­s who will perhaps use a different mining method,” said Stastka.

The environmen­t ministry said it had stopped examining Astur Gold's request over procedural errors. Its spokesman Matyas Vitik added that a potential change to the law reversing the moratorium would require “many preliminar­y analyses”.

“Environmen­tal protection is a priority,” he told AFP.

Jiri Bendl, head of the Vesely Vrch civic associatio­n, said the project was “detrimenta­l not just in terms of ecology but economics too”.

“If we leave the gold to future generation­s, our citizens and the Czech state won't lose anything. The only loser would be the mining lobby.”

He added that he backed a movement protesting a giant gold mine project in Rosia Montana in Romania, where Canadian company Gabriel Resources wants to dig up 300 tonnes of gold and 1,600 tonnes of silver.

They plan to use 12,000 tonnes of cyanide a year, which is 12 times the amount used for mining in all of the European Union.

“The situation here is different from other parts of the world that mine gold, mainly with regards to population density,” Bendl told AFP. — AFP

 ??  ?? WHETTING APPETITE: File picture shows Gold bars at the Czech Central Bank in Prague. Czech gold deposits are whetting the appetites of foreign prospector­s hoping to see the new government lift a mining moratorium in the aftermath of snap elections. —...
WHETTING APPETITE: File picture shows Gold bars at the Czech Central Bank in Prague. Czech gold deposits are whetting the appetites of foreign prospector­s hoping to see the new government lift a mining moratorium in the aftermath of snap elections. —...

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