Philex sets out to check mine tailings dam spill
>> Monday, January 14, 2013
By
ThetMesias
ITOGON, Benguet -- Philex Mining Corp.
Chairman, CEO Manuel V. Pangilinan and Carlos Primo David, Ph.D., recently signed
agreements that would determine quantity of the tailings spill at the company’s
Padcal mine here and revegetate abandoned tailings ponds, at the Meralco
offices on Ortigas Ave.
This, as the Itogon local government
expressed interest in enlisting the Balog Creek, whose remediation and
rehabilitation is being done by Philex Mining Corp., as part of its ecotourism
offering.
This according to Feliciano Diso, Jr.,
manager of Community Relations Department at Philex Mining’s Padcal Project,
who said that Itogon Mayor Oscar Camantiles has sent word requesting that the
“infrastructure installed by Philex Mining in the creek be made permanent.”
Diso added that Padcal officials are
now making arrangements to meet with the mayor and talk about the matter, and
for the latter to visit Balog Creek, which has been affected by the accidental
discharge of non-toxic sediment from Padcal’s Tailings Pond No. 3 (TP3) on Aug. 1.
He added that the mayor has expressed
interest in Philex Mining’s rehabilitation of Balog Creek after he saw some
photos of it.
Meanwhile, with Pangilinan in the signing
were Marilyn Aquino, member of Philex Mining’s board of
directors and legal director of the company’s
parent firm, First Pacific, Philex Mining President and COO Eulalio Austin, Jr.
and Victor Francisco, vice president for Environment andCommunity Relations at
Philex Mining.
Pangilinan also signed another agreement
involving a proposal by Nicomedesdela Cruz Briones, Ph.D., on the
rehabilitation of Balog Creek and its convergence area with Agno River after
the accidental discharge of sediment from Philex Mining’s tailings pond in
Itogon, Benguet on Aug. 1.
Dr. David is professor at the National
Institute of Geological Sciences, University of the Philippines-Diliman, while
Dr. Briones is professor at the School of Environmental Science and Management
at UP Los Baños, in Laguna.
The accord with Dr. Briones includes
proposals from five other scientists on therehabilitation of the affected
waters.
The other proposals were done by Emmanuel
Lleva, who holds a doctoratedegree in environmental science from UP Los Baños;
Maxima Flavier, who has aPh.D. in agricultural chemistry, also from UP Los
Baños; Nina Cadiz, who finished a doctorate degree in horticulture-crop
physiology at UP Los Baños and sandwich program with the University of Wales,
in Cardiff; and Louie Balicanta, who has a master’s degree in urban planning
from UP Diliman.
Philex Mining announced last month that it
already cleaned the silt off of about half of the 2.5-kilometer stretch of
Balog Creek, collecting 85,000 bags of silt which have since been hauled off to
and kept in temporary storage areas.
The company also said it installed
eight silt traps along the Maligaboy Creek, another tributary of Agno River, to
contain silt coming from the upstream. Another silt trap was being constructed
at the 2.1-kilometer mark near Balog Creek’s convergence area with Agno River.
In addition, Philex Mining has
constructed riprap walls in designated areas, and improving access to and along
the waterway by constructing footpaths on rugged terrain and building hanging
bridges and elevated pathways down the creek.
Itogon, known for its rugged terrain
and cooler climes, holds an annual three-day traverse of Mt. Ugo every March.
This allows camping and trekking enthusiasts to walk for three days starting
from Kayapa, Nueva Vizcaya up to Itogon, Benguet.
This annual event is sponsored by
Philex Mining and organized by the Department of Tourism in the Cordillera
Administrative Region, in cooperation with Itogon-LGU.
Philex Mining has been implementing a
remediation and rehabilitation program for Balog Creek and its convergence area
with Agno River since the Aug. 1 accident, which
followed heavy rains brought about by typhoons. (There were no reports of
casualties or injuries.
This would require the company to spend
at least P1 billion between Aug. 2012 and Apr. 2013,
including the rehabilitation of its TP3, particularly the building of an open
spillway to replace the pond’s current penstock system of draining non-toxic
water into Balog Creek through an underground tunnel.
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