Tests affirm water, fish quality at Padcal rivers
>> Monday, August 5, 2013
By
TotengTanglao
TUBA, Benguet --—The quality of water
at tributaries near Philex Mining Corp’s Padcal Mines, including a creek and a
river in nearby Itogon town and downstream to the irrigation canal in
Pangasinan remains below effluent standards set by government and some foreign
environmental commissions.
This
according to the tests conducted June 12 on samples taken by the Joint
Multipartite Monitoring Team (JMMT) in eight water-sampling stations at
Padcal’s Tailings Storage Facility No. 3 (TSF3), the convergence area of Balog
Creek and Agno River, San Roque Dam, and down to the irrigation canal of the
National Irrigation Administration, in San Manuel, Pangasinan.
“The
latest set of tests sustained the assurance made by Philex Mining since last
year that the tailings-leak accident at TSF3 on Aug. 1, 2012 did not bring
toxic materials into Balog Creek, Agno River, and San Roque Dam,” Michael
Toledo, senior vice president for Corporate Affairs at Philex Mining, said.
Led
by government regulators, the JMMT is also composed of Philex Mining
environment staff and third-party experts tasked to monitor, among other
things, the effluent standards at Padcal as well as the tributaries where
nontoxic water from TSF3 discharges into.
Effluent
standards, as set in Administrative Order Nos. 34 and 35 of the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), refer to the restriction imposed by
government on quantities, rates, and concentrations of material in water
discharges.
The
tests done by CRL Environmental Corp., a full-service laboratory, showed that
total suspendedsolids (TSS), a water-quality measurement, averaged 8.25
milligrams per liter (mg/L), which is way below the 50 mg/L standard set by
government, according to Libby Ricafort, vice president at Philex Mining and
resident manager of Padcal Operations.
Water
samples also passed the acceptable standards for toxicity as tests showed the
following levels: cadmium at 0.006 milligram per liter (mg/L), as against the
DENR limit of 0.02 mg/L, copper at 0.02 mg/L (versus 1 mg/L), lead at 0.04 mg/L
(0.1 mg/L), chromium at 0.02 mg/L (0.05 mg/L), and mercury at 0.0001 mg/L
(0.002 mg/L).
The
fish samples taken from the Balog-Agno convergence area and downstream of Agno
River in several towns leading to San Manuel, Pangasinan, also showed amounts
of accumulated heavymetals—mercury, cadmium, lead, arsenic, and copper—below
the limits set by the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources.
The
examination was done between April and June by the SentrosaPagsusuri,
Pagsasanay at Pangangasiwang Pang-Agham at Teknolohiya Corp. (SentroTek) on
tissue samples of tilapia and eel, which are abundant in the said tributaries.
The fish samples taken from Agno River also passed all the environmental quality standards set by the European and Paris Commissions and by the United States Food and Drug Administration, making the fish fit
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