By
Geraldine G. Dumallig
TABUK CITY, Kalinga – The end of small-scale
mining may come sooner after the Mercury Treaty formulated during the
recent Minamata Convention on Mercury in Japan stipulated the stop of
mercury trade globally.
Lawyer and Ban Toxics (Bantox) executive
director Richard Gutierrez, bared this saying the MCM was conducted last
January to address effect of mercury on humans and environment which had become
global concern.
This he said has two major impacts in the
country. First is stoppage and elimination of supply in the market
for legal or illegal use such as those
used in small scale mining.
Traders, he said, had been importing the
hazardous substance from other nations since the Philippines shutdown all its
mercury mines.
The United States and the European Union he
said don’t export mercury.
Once the country starts complying with the
treaty, mercury users like the artisanal small-scale gold miners (ASGM)
will experience the biggest impact since the substance would eventually
be gone in the market or if not supply would be scarce, it will be
sold in much higher prices.
With this eventuality, he encouraged all ASGM
to shift from mercury dependence since a technology for safer mining methods
could be availed in the locality.
Gutierrez said mercury impact on health
and the environment especially through amalgamation has its consequences
ranging from mercury poisoning, kidney damage, brain and neurological damage
and contamination of the land and water networks eventually affecting the human
food chain.
Secondly, the treaty he said should be a
wake-up call for the government to stop the entry of said substance in the
country to avoid further concerns on how to manage its storage.
As one provision of the treaty, governments
he said are mandated to come up with proper waste storage and plan how the
country would collect, segregate and contain the substance, a process which d
cause a fortune and could become more costly if the country continues to
import mercury.
“If we continue to import mercury the storage
problem would rise,” he said adding that this include importing products using
mercury as prescribed by the agreement.
The Minamata Convention on Mercury was named
after a city in Japan where mercury pollution incurred during the mid-20th
century resulting to various serious health damages among the populace that
shocked the world.
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