Peru: Indigenous communities protest against the modification of the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) of the Las Bambas mining project
요약
보고된 날짜: 2024년 3월 11일
위치: 페루
기업 페이지
China Minmetals - Parent Company , Minera Las Bambas (JV between MMG (62.5%),Guoxin International Investment Co. Ltd (22.5%), and CITIC Metal Co. Ltd (15.0%)) - Subsidiary프로젝트
Las Bambas - Operation영향받은
영향받은 사람의 수: 숫자를 알 수 없음
Community: ( 숫자를 알 수 없음 - 페루 - 알 수 없는 업종 , Gender not reported ) , Indigenous peoples: ( 숫자를 알 수 없음 - 페루 - 알 수 없는 업종 , Gender not reported ) , Ecosystem: ( 숫자를 알 수 없음 - 페루 - 알 수 없는 업종 , Gender not reported )토픽들
영향 평가 , 시위 , 불충분/부적절한 논의결과
응답 요청 여부: 예, BHRRC에 의해 요청됨
출처: News outlet

CooperAcción
“Proposed copper mine modifications spark community outcry in Peru” – March 11, 2024
… In late December 2023, when communities in the southeastern Peruvian province of Cotabambas received a copy of proposed modifications to the Las Bambas copper mine, they were at first surprised, and then frustrated. The document, which arrived between Christmas and New Year’s, contained a proposal to almost double the mining operation but lacked detailed studies on its environmental impact on aquifers, wetlands and rivers, which are crucial to the communities. Yet, they were given mere weeks to send in comments. In response, around a dozen organizations sent a letter to the agency of environmental certification for sustainable investment (SENACE), requesting they annul the amendment.
“They didn’t consult with us at all, they only sent notifications,” said Walter Contreras, a local leader of the Cotabambas Defense Front, one of several organizations that signed the letter. It was impossible to infer from the document what exactly the impacts were going to be for communities like his, which are directly in the mine’s impact zone.
The open-pit mine of Las Bambas sits at 4,000 meters (13,100 feet) above sea level. It is one of the largest copper mines in the world, producing up to 2% of the world’s copper, a critical mineral for the clean energy transition. In theory, Las Bambas can produce 320,000 metric tons of copper concentrate a year, but widespread protests over the social and environmental impacts of the mine and the transport of minerals have never allowed the mine to fulfill that potential...
Since 2015, the mine has faced frequent protests, which at times turned deadly, in some cases pushing the government to declare a state of emergency in the region in 2015, 2018 and 2022. Regular protests along the road used to transport the heavy metals have erupted since 2016 over environmental impacts and lack of compensation. At the end of 2021, a blockade in Chumbivilcas, 200 km (124 mi) from the mine, stopped operations in Las Bambas for several weeks, causing losses of $9.5 million each day. In 2022, communities blocked the ore transport road, demanding improved living conditions, and members of the Fuerabamba and Huancuire community in the Challhuahuacho district protested on the mining property itself, alleging noncompliance with social investment commitments. In 2022, the company reported that it had lost 400 days of transportation since 2016, when it began operations.
Mongabay reached out to MMG and SENACE for comments but received no reply.