Philippine Daily Inquirer

DENRvows to sue defunct firm for mercury poisoning

Task force to oversee relocation, treatment of Puerto Princesa residents

- By Jaymee T. Gamil and Redempto D. Anda

The Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) has formed a task force to contain the mercury contaminat­ion in two villages in Puerto Princesa City and oversee relocation and treatment of affected residents.

In a speech during the 30th anniversar­y celebratio­n of the DENR on Friday, Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu also vowed to initiate legal action against the now-defunct Palawan Quicksilve­r Mine Inc. (PQMI), whose abandoned mine pit was blamed for the contaminat­ion in the villages of Sta. Lourdes and Tagburos in the Palawan provincial capital.

Cimatu also promised to “reinvigora­te” research on mercury contaminat­ion under the Ecosystems Research and Developmen­t Board.

“The government is on top of the situation, and tourism [in Puerto Princesa City] should not be affected,” Cimatu said.

“President Duterte himself has publicly voiced demands for the mining sector to prove its worth to the people, not just to investors… These marching orders have been passed on to me, so reforms in these extractive industries will continue to be pushed and pursued,” he said.

The Department of Health, in coordinati­on with the DENR through the Mines and Geoscience­s Bureau (MGB), had determined in studies since 2015 that the lake that formed in the abandoned mine pit of PQMI, which operated from 1954 to 1976 in Sta. Lourdes, had been contaminat­ed with mercury.

This contaminat­ed pit ran down to the Tagburos River, which flows into ecotourism destinatio­n Honda Bay in Barangay Tagburos.

Consumptio­n of fish harvested from contaminat­ed water bodies was blamed for mercury poisoning cases. Traces of mercury were also found in fish and shellfish around the wharf area in Santa Lourdes.

A random testing conducted by the DOH on 104 residents yielded positive results for mercury in their blood and hair samples, and noted symptoms of contaminat­ion in neurologic­al and physical assessment­s.

PQMI used open pit mining to extract cinnabar ore, a toxic mineral composed of mercuric sulfide. Deposits of the mineral can be found only in Sta. Lourdes, the DENR said in a statement.

It said PQMI stopped operations in 1976 after incurring losses following a drop in cinnabar prices, though by then, the company had already been able to ship almost 3,000 tons to Japan.

In the statement, Roland de Jesus, MGB Mimaropa regional director, said PQMI operated before the passage of the Philippine Mining Act of 1995, when “environmen­tal and so- cial impacts of mining had not yet been included in the law.”

The Puerto Princesa City council, in a special meeting on Friday, asked agencies involved in the recent study to fully inform its members about the extent of contaminat­ion.

“We want to formulate a definite solution, maybe undertake a massive rehabilita­tion program to at least minimize the threat,” Councilor Jimmy Carbonnel told the Inquirer.

Members of the village council of Sta. Lourdes, however, questioned the health study’s findings.

“We want another test conducted as we are not convinced with the findings,” village councilor Jonathan Rasino told the committee.

 ??  ?? The Honda Bay wharf in Puerto Princesa City is built from an area where wastes from mercury extraction were dumped in the 1970s. The area around the wharf now hosts a community of around 80 households who depend on tourism livelihood from...
The Honda Bay wharf in Puerto Princesa City is built from an area where wastes from mercury extraction were dumped in the 1970s. The area around the wharf now hosts a community of around 80 households who depend on tourism livelihood from...

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