Manila Bulletin

Duterte warns mining companies

- By REUTERS

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte yesterday warned mining companies to strictly follow tighter environmen­tal rules or shut down, saying the Southeast Asian nation could survive without a mining industry.

“We will survive as a nation without you,” Duterte told a media briefing, referring to the country’s miners. “Either you follow strictly government standards or you close down.”

It was the boldest statement yet from Duterte against domestic miners that he warned in the weeks before he took office on June 30 to “shape up” and to “stop spoiling the land.”

The Philippine­s has so far suspended the operations of seven domestic nickel mines for failure to comply with environmen­tal regulation­s.

Environmen­t and Natural Resources Secretary Regina Lopez, who began an audit of all mining sites on July 8, last week vowed to close more operations as public complaints mount against those causing environmen­tal destructio­n.

“You try to castigate Gina Lopez for being strict, and yet you destroy the land, destroy the soil, and then you get rich,” Duterte said, again referring to miners without giving names.

He said he can forgo the annual 40 billion Philippine pesos ($852 million) in government revenue from the mining industry.

Some mining executives say the sector is being unfairly targeted.

“The industry is using less than 20,000 hectares out of the 30 million hectares comprising the total land area in the Philippine­s,” Dante Bravo, president of Global Ferronicke­l Holdings Inc., the Philippine­s’ secondbigg­est nickel ore miner.

“And we are contributi­ng so much to the national economy and local developmen­t. So, I think we should be treated fairly,” Bravo told Reuters.

The Philippine­s is the biggest supplier of nickel ore to top consumer China, taking over from Indonesia after that country banned shipments of unprocesse­d mineral ores in 2014.

Mining contribute­s less than one percent to the Philippine economy, with a large chunk of minerals from gold to copper and nickel remaining untapped, according to the country’s Mines and Geoscience­s Bureau.

Of 9 million hectares identified as having high mineral reserves, only three percent is being mined, according to the Bureau.

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