NUEVA VIZCAYA-House Bill 3667, making Nueva Vizcaya
mining-free and authored principally by
Rep. Carlos Padilla of the lone district of Nueva Vizcaya, now goes to the
Senate.
Padilla said there are
some companies presently engaged in mining in his province.
There are also
individuals doing illegal mining, he said.
Both would have to
respect the mandate of the bill, if it becomes a law, he said.
He added that he has
no doubt that the Senate would approve the measure, which he said would protect
the beauty of the mountains and environment of Nueva Vizcaya.
The bill defines mining
as extraction of valuable minerals or other geological materials, including
large-scale and small-scale mining activities involving exploration,
feasibility, development, and processing.
It does not include
gathering of sand and gravel.
It provides for
penalties for violators. An individual offender would face imprisonment of six
to 12 years and a fine of P100,000 to P500,000.
If the violator were a
corporation, partnership or association, the officer or officers responsible
for the violation would suffer the penalties.
If the offender were
an alien, he or she would be deported after imprisonment and payment of fine.
The Department of
Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) would be mandated to issue
implementing rules and regulations.
The provincial government,
in coordination with the DENR, would review all mining licenses or agreements
and determine those to be terminated and those that may be allowed to continue
until such time that the permits may allow.
Last week, the House
approved two bills declaring Cagayan de Oro City and Catanduanes mining-free
areas.
Another bill, making
Eastern Samar another mining-free province, is awaiting third-reading approval.
Eastern Samar Rep. Ben
Evardone said there are both legal and illegal miners in his province.
However, the proposed
law would not automatically stop the two existing multibillion-peso mining
projects in Nueva Vizcaya – the Didipio gold-copper project and the Runruno
gold-molybdenum project – as they would still be subjected for review.
Nestled along the
remote mountain border of Nueva Vizcaya and Quirino, the Didipio project is one
of the first two large-scale mining projects approved during the Ramos
administration under the 1995 Mining Act.
The Didipio venture
commenced commercial operation in April last year following nearly two decades
of exploration and construction activities.
The Runruno project in
Quezon town is expected to start its commercial operation this year.
Their contractors –
the Australian firm OceanGold Philippines Inc. for the Didipio project and the
British-owned FCF Minerals for the Runruno project – are both holders of
financial and technical assistance agreements with the government. – With Charlie Lagasca
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