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page 12b

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“We will in no way sell our Mother Earth. To do so would be to give up our work of collaborating with the spirits to protect the heart of the world, which sustains and gives life to the rest of the universe. It would be to go against our own origins, and those of all existence.”
Statement of the U'wa people of Colombia , August 1998.

“The conditions of negotiation with transnational companies are always disadvantageous for our country. They are the ones who impose the economic conditions that regulate them. For us as indigenous communities everything is lost: our land, our capacity to negotiate, our culture, our security. We remain with a damaged environment and exhausted natural resources.”
Armando Valbuena Wouriyu, National Indigenous Organization of Colombia , 2003.

“Before the mining operation, our livelihood was so beautiful. The river that we drink, wash and [use for] laundry was always clean naturally. The air we breathed was so fresh naturally and the roads without dust. But now, as the mine began, my people have been badly destroyed. Their lives and our environment, our trees, rivers and animals are no longer looking good as before. The indigenous people, women, children, travel miles and miles in search of fresh water to drink, food to eat, and materials for shelter.”
Indigenous woman living near the notorious Ok Tedi mine in Papua New Guinea , which was supported by the Australian export credit agency EFIC. She does not want to be identified for fear of her safety.

Affected communities provide sobering testimonies and well-documented evidence that many IFI-funded projects cause environmental disasters and intensify social conflicts, rather than contributing to the creation of peaceful, equitable and environmentally sustainable societies. Through the large-scale pollution of land, air and water, people lose their livelihoods and develop health problems. In addition, fossil fuel and mining operations are often associated with severe human rights violations.

There is a growing worldwide movement demanding the recognition of these cumulative negative impacts, which are also referred to as the ‘ecological debt'. In the context of the extractive industries, the ecological debt refers to the plundering by industrialized countries of fossil fuel and mineral resources, leaving behind a trail of degraded forests, contaminated air and water, divided communities and diminished biological diversity. The responsible governments and International Financial Institutions need to acknowledge their ecological debt, rehabilitate or compensate for the damage they have caused, and transform their actions in the future.

financing the loss of livelihoods

Extractive industries place a heavy burden on their surroundings throughout the course of their operations. Land, water, air and the environment are polluted through chemical waste discharge, spills, gas flaring, dust generation and the dumping of wastes.

Chemical, oil and wastewater spills are among the worst possible environmental accidents. They are often the result of companies sacrificing safety measures in order to cut costs, putting people and the environment at an extremely high risk. Between 1998 and 2000, three serious chemical spills occurred at the Kumtor gold mine in the Kyrgyz Republic in Central Asia . The spills poisoned more than 3,000 people, and the number of people who died as a result is yet to be determined. Kumtor officials and the World Bank's International Finance Corporation refuse to divulge the extent of damage caused by the disaster.

The people living in the vicinity of mining sites are plagued by diminished access to clean drinking water, affected crops and sick animals. And these threats to their livelihoods do not evaporate when the operations terminate. When an oil, mining or gas project ends, the surrounding lands are contaminated, water sources polluted, and forests cut down.

Generally, the women in mining communities are the most disempowered through the pollution of natural resources that inevitably accompanies extractive projects. Women, who are often in charge of food provision through agriculture or the collection of forest products, are regularly forced out of their traditional economic roles when natural resources are contaminated or no longer available. Women, in particular, are also more susceptible to water pollution due to the critical role that water plays in daily household routines. In addition, women have little control over or access to the financial benefits of the development of oil and mineral reserves. They become dependent on the wages of men, who are more likely to find jobs at the mine or drilling site. Men, however, often fall into the trap of spending money on alcohol and gambling. The end result is that women lose decision-making power, and the household is left with less cash for food and other necessities.

Case studies in this publication and elsewhere clearly illustrate the destruction of natural resources. For example, the contamination and disappearance of fish is a well-known phenomenon around mine sites. In Laos , where the Australian mining company Oxiana is currently developing the Sepon gold mine with the likely support of the European Investment Bank, mercury is discharged into streams leading to the Nam Kok River . Local fishermen fear mercury poisoning, and complain of a severe reduction in the variety and volume of fish (see case study page 12 ).

In another example, one of Georgia 's main export products is bottled water from the Borjomi reserve. However, local people have well-founded fears that the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, which will cut through the area and which several International Financial Institutions have recently decided to support, will pollute their water (see case study page 38 ).

Communities do fight back. The struggle in Tambogrande provides a good example of the clashing interests of an agricultural community and a gold mining company. In the 1950s, the San Lorenzo Valley in Peru received World Bank support for an irrigation project that turned dry desert into fertile farmland that now supports 20,000 people with its mango and lime production. Ironically, the World Bank has recently been asked by a Canadian mining company to support a cyanide-based open pit gold mine in the middle of the valley. The project, referred to as the Tambogrande Gold Mine, would be worth US$240 million and would have a life span of ten years. Aware of the likely environmental and social impacts on their agriculture, farmers and residents are fiercely opposing the proposed gold mine through popular referenda, blockades and manifestations.

financing danger and poor health

The extractive industries are among the most hazardous industries in the world. Workers are constantly exposed to dangerous chemicals, explosives, heavy equipment, noise, dust, and toxic waste, often without being informed about the dangers they face. This is particularly dangerous for pregnant women, who are especially vulnerable to noise and pollution. Many workers have died in explosions, collapses, landslides and floods. Some companies do not provide adequate protection (safety boots, gloves, goggles, hard hats, etc.) for their workers, and mine jobs are often insecure, poorly paid, and without insurance benefits or bonuses for performing hazardous work.

Women also suffer from an increased risk of HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases as a side effect of the extractive industries. Mining and construction operations attract new workers, mostly young men, into the area. Unruly behavior, alcohol-related incidents, gambling and abuse of women are common around project sites. Additionally, dislocation and loss of livelihood force women, including very young girls, into prostitution (see case study page 22 ). Many do not know how to protect themselves from sexually transmitted diseases, which are as a consequence spreading very rapidly. AIDS, for example, is rampant in many extractive industry towns. In spite of this, International Financial Institutions have no guidelines to address HIV/AIDS prevention.

financing militarization and human rights abuses

International Financial Institution involvement in extractive industries is frequently associated with political and economic instability, corrupt government officials, dictatorial regimes, and human rights abuses. Claiming that they are non-political actors, IFIs do not take these situations into account and have no human rights standards to guide their involvement. However, in countries like these, the projects ignite social unrest and fuel armed conflict due to fierce competition over control of resources and revenues.

Authoritarian regimes and dictatorships have a legacy of supporting the extractive industries, and vice versa. The hiring of paramilitary units or company security personnel results in abuses and human rights violations and escalates existing armed conflict. Here again, IFIs have no security and human rights guidelines, but instead state that they are non-political institutions and cannot influence these situations.

One case of blatant human rights abuses related to the mining industry is taking place on the island of Mindoro in the Philippines , where opposition activists are considered political extremists and therefore targeted by military operations. Recently, in just over two years, more than 20 community leaders and environmental and human rights activists who were opposing mining projects were brutally murdered.5 The Philippine government has not ordered an independent investigation into the death of these leaders (see page 11 )

financing the marginalization of indigenous peoples

Indigenous peoples are particularly vulnerable to mining and extraction because it disrupts their culture, the very basis of their survival. Indigenous peoples'ways of life are rooted in traditions closely linked to the cycles of the natural environment, and handed down from generation to generation. The operations of companies engaged in mining and fossil fuel extraction break these links by destroying the forests, defacing the land, poisoning the air and water, and erasing cultural identities, thereby pushing indigenous people to the brink of physical extinction. The imposition of mining, drilling and piping in indigenous territories violates the International Labor Organization's Convention 169 on Indigenous and Tribal People.

In Papua New Guinea , for example, the introduction of money that accompanied the influx of mining corporations has led to a fundamental change in societal relations. People formerly relied on a social security system based on the free provision of goods and services, with an understanding that these would be returned when needed. The handing over of money after an exchange of goods makes an abrupt ending to personal transactions, and in some non-monetary societies, the traditional security system is rapidly losing value as mining operations gain ground (see case study page 30 ). As companies do not recognize the religious and spiritual connections of people to their environment, they disrupt a cultural system that is based on respect for trees, land and water. They take away people's lives of dignity and replace them with existences of ongoing humiliation and deprivation.

Finally, mining threatens the health and lives of previously isolated indigenous peoples due to their lack of resistance to disease. For example, the Camisea gas project in Peru already wiped out 42 percent of the Nahua population through the introduction of diseases like the flu. For many indigenous peoples, the only accessible and acceptable health remedies are the medicinal plants in their natural environment, which are in turn endangered by drilling, piping and mining

financing climate change

In order to avoid dangerous climate change, many countries have committed to reducing their greenhouse gas emissions by signing the Kyoto Protocol and other international agreements. However, these same countries continue to subsidize fossil fuel operations through their International Financial Institutions. This major policy incoherence must be addressed immediately.

Climate change is a direct threat for millions of people. Extreme weather events, the spread of exotic diseases and flooding will affect us all. Environmental refugees are already traveling the planet in search of a safer place to live. The entire population of the Pacific island of Tuvalu , which will be one of the first islands to be flooded and is already experiencing the siltation of its waters, has applied for asylum with New Zealand . From a climate justice perspective, richer countries should seriously reduce their fossil fuel emissions.

Contrary to objectives agreed to in international environmental treaties, IFIs continue to provide support to fossil fuel operations. According to the World Resources Institute, fossil-fueled power generation and oil and gas development accounted for 40% of trade and project finance flows to developing countries between 1994 and 1999.6 The World Bank Group alone provided over US$24 billion in financing for fossil fuel power and production between 1992 and the end of 2002.

Once burned, the oil transported through the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline in the Caspian region will contribute an estimated 185 million tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere each year. This controversial pipeline received financing from the World Bank and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development at the end of 2003, and other IFIs are likely to follow (see case study page 38 ).

Metal mining operations are also a major contributor to climate change due to their exorbitant energy demands. The Peruvian and Tanzanian mining sectors' enormous hunger for energy have caused electricity deficits and put significant pressure on the countries' balance of payments due to increased energy imports.8 In another example, the West Africa Gas Pipeline will allegedly pipe gas from Nigeria through Benin and Togo in order to power gold mines in Ghana (see case study page 34 ).

This trend needs to be reversed. Governments should comply with their commitments to combat climate change by withdrawing support for extractive industry projects and supporting renewable forms of energy to power sustainable societies.

 


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