Small-scale miners blamed for mercury in NV rivers
>> Monday, October 21, 2013
BAYOMBONG,
Nueva Vizcaya – The unabated small-scale mining is the culprit in the
mercury contamination of rivers along the remote mountain border of Nueva
Vizcaya and Quirino, according to the Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB).
Mario Ancheta, MGB director for Cagayan Valley, said findings show that
the once pristine Didipio River in Barangay Didipio is “biologically” dead due
to small-scale mining operations in the area.
Inhabited by indigenous folk, Didipio, which is being claimed by Quirino
and Nueva Vizcaya, is the base of the national government-sanctioned Didipio
gold-copper project being undertaken by Australian mining firm OceanaGold
Philippines.
Ancheta said it is unlikely that the Didipio mining project caused the
contamination of the river with mercury, which is a banned substance in its
operation.
“It is not the large-scale mining that caused the contamination of the
river but the small-scale miners who are using mercury in their operations,”
Ancheta said. Small-scale miners, according to reports, use mercury to extract
gold with the aid of water, which is then indiscriminately dumped into
rivers.
MGB’s statement was in response to claims by various anti-mining groups,
which conducted a fact-finding mission last month, that the Didipio mining
project allegedly caused the deterioration of the quality of water in rivers,
creeks and streams in the area.
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