Philex tailings dam plugged;miners clean affected waters
>> Tuesday, October 16, 2012
TUBA,
Benguet -- About 200 miners and 100 office employees of Philex Mining Corp.
have resumed cleanup of Balog Creek after the sinkhole at Padcal Mine’s
tailings storage facility was plugged fully, with more volunteers expressing
their willingness to join the cleanup drive in the coming days.
“Our
personnel at Padcal have informed us that students and teachers at the Philex
community in Benguet, and families living at the mine site and nearby areas
have also signified their interest to participate in our cleanup drive,”
Michael Toledo, senior vice president of PMC, said.
But
volunteers other than the immediate employees of PMC will have to wait for a
few more days until all the necessary logistics and structures are done,
according to Robert Salamat, a metallurgical engineer who works at the Mill
Division of PMC’s Padcal Mine and head of the Environmental Team tasked to
clean up the affected waterway.
Salamat
said the 300 employees—mostly miners who volunteered to spearhead the cleanup
and rehabilitation of Balog Creek and its convergence area with Agno
River—resumed their task on September 28, when weatherconditions improved.
“While
most of our team members down there on Balog Creek shoveling the sediment into
sacks and hauling these sacks into a temporary storage facility, the other
members are continuously creating more access leading to the creek while others
are building temporary structures for the medical and other personnel along the
creek,” he added.
Engineer
Libby Ricafort, resident manager of Padcal operations, said the team began
working at the site creating friendly access on the otherwise rugged terrain
leading to Balog Creek during the first week of August, and started cleaning up
the following week. The team had to suspend its cleanup, however, following
another spill at TP3.
Toledo
said the cleanup of Balog Creek is part of PMC’s commitment to fulfill its
obligations on the remediation and rehabilitation activities stemming from the
Padcal accident, but stressed the company would not pay any punitive
penalties such as fines as the spill was caused by force majeure.
Philex voluntarily
suspended its operations at Padcal Mine on Aug. 1 after historically
unprecedented heavy rains caused the discharge of sediment from TP3, affecting
the Balog Creek and its convergence area with Agno River. Brought about by
typhoons Ferdie and Gener, the heavydownpour reached 331.80 millimeters
(mm) at the site on Aug. 1, far exceeding almost 100 mm Padcal’s 50-year rainfall
record of 234.50 mm in a
single day.
PMC
engineers and environmentalists, as well as external experts and government
regulators have attested that the sediment from TP3 is non-toxic as chemical
compounds used in the company’s operations at Padcal were
biodegradable.
Toledo
also noted the findings of the Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB) absolving PMC
of any fault with regard to the Aug. 1 accident, saying the company’s TP3 and
its secondary facilities were well maintained and monitored, and that its
personnel had not been remiss in carrying out their duties.
“The
findings came as no surprise because the company’s environmental management
system, including the operation and maintenance ofTailings Pond No. 3, has long
been ISO-compliant and -certified,” he said, emphasizing PMC’s ISO-14001
certification for years 2002, 2006, and 2008, and the latest certification
issued on May 10, 2011.
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