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MacArthur River Zinc Mine
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Christoph Filnkößl
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Dreischluchtendamm_hauptwall_2006.jpg
As with many dams, there is a debate over costs and benefits. Although there are potential economic benefits such as flood control and hydroelectric power, there are also concerns about the relocation of people who have been or will be displaced by the rising waters; siltation that could limit the dam's useful life; loss of numerous valuable archaeological and cultural sites; and the adverse effects of increased pollution upon the regional ecosystem.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Gorges_Dam
http://www.ianandwendy.com/slideshow/OtherTrips/ChinaVietnamCambodia/China/Yangtze/The Yangtze River or Chang Jiang is the longest river in Asia and the
third-longest in the world, after the Amazon in South America, and the
Nile in Africa. The river is about 6,300 km long and flows from its
source in Qinghai Province, eastwards into the East China Sea at
Shanghai. It has traditionally been considered a dividing line between
North and South China. As the largest river in the region, the Yangtze
is historically, culturally, and economically important to China.
The Yangtze flows into the East China Sea and was navigable by
ocean-going vessels up to a thousand miles from its mouth even before
the Three Gorges Dam was built. As of June 2003, this dam spans the
river, flooding Fengjie, the first of a number of towns affected by
the massive flood control and power generation project. This is the
largest comprehensive irrigation project in the world, and has a
significant impact on the China's agriculture. Its proponents argue
that it will free people living along the river from floods that have
repeatedly threatened them in the past, and will offer them
electricity and water transport -- though at the expense of
permanently flooding many existing towns (including numerous ancient
cultural relics) and causing large-scale changes in the local ecology.
Opponents of the dam point out that there are three different kinds of
floods on the Yangtze River: floods which originate in the upper
reaches, floods which originate in the lower reaches, and floods along
the entire length of the river. They argue that the Three Gorges dam
will actually make flooding in the upper reaches worse and have little
or no impact on floods which originate in the lower reaches. Twelve
hundred years of low water marks on the river were recorded in the
inscriptions and the carvings of carp at Baiheliang, now submerged.
The Yangtze is flanked with metallurgical, power, chemical, auto,
building materials and machinery industrial belts, and high-tech
development zones. It is playing an increasingly crucial role in the
river valley's economic growth and has become a vital link for
international shipping to the inland provinces. The river is a major
transportation artery for China, connecting the interior with the
coast. The river used as a waterway for commerce offer now the
possibility to cruise at leisure. Since 2004 a European luxury
cruising company has brought very high standard and with the help of
Swiss hotelier Nicolas C. Solari developed and opened three beautiful
vessels now cruising the mighty river. The river is one of the world's
busiest waterways. Traffic includes commercial traffic transporting
bulk goods such as coal as well as manufactured goods and passengers.
Cargo transportation reached 795 million tons in 2005.[6][7] River
cruises several days long especially through the beautiful and scenic
Three Gorges area are becoming popular as the tourism industry grows
in China.
Clearly the best place to ship bauxite to China is from Weipa and
Gove, both of which now work under the Rio Alcan flag. And that leaves
Rio pondering the delicious prospect of establishing a new growth
option for its northern Australian bauxite twins.
Rio Alcan is, of course, the construct of Rio Tinto's Comalco and
Canada's Alcan.
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,,23370958-30538,00.html
http://www.qag.qld.gov.au/exhibitions/current/xstrata_coal_emerging_indigenous_art_award
"The argument that you should not touch that river on spiritual and
cultural grounds has never changed," she said.
Ms McCarthy was one of three Aboriginal MLAs to defy her party and
cross the floor last year when the Territory Government moved special
legislation to ensure the expansion.
NT Environment Centre head Charles Roche says the permanent diversion
of the river will cause massive damage to the local eco-system.
"We are very disappointed that it has come to this, we believe that
there was a strong case and we know that to divert this river will
cause irreparable cultural and environmental harm," he said.
Traditional owner Jacob Lancen was inconsolable outside court.
"There's no future for us now. That's it. You've killed us. that's it.
I can't say any more," he said.
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,,23744269-23289,00.html
In the northwest Queensland town of Mount Isa, where the land may be
parched but the community is swimming in riches from the mining boom,
the problem is that nobody seems to want to get to the heart of why
its children are sick.
The Queensland Government study released yesterday confirmed that 11
per cent of the town's children had unsafe lead levels. It wasn't the
first such study. A similar blood screening program in 1990-92 found
that 36per cent of the children sampled had lead poisoning.
The problem is that lead poisoning in children usually becomes a
problem only later in life, with symptoms such as learning and
behaviour difficulties. Only in extreme cases - such as local girl
Stella Hare, 6, who recorded a blood lead level almost twice the safe
limit and is just 15kg - do the brutal effects of the problem become
undeniably real.
Despite there being an obvious problem, neither Xstrata (previously Mt
Isa Mines), the city council nor the Queensland Government seems
terribly keen to do anything about it. Why? The simple answer is
money....
On Wednesday, the Government enacted legislation repealing decades-old
laws that excused Xstrata from meeting the same emissions standards as
1200 other mining operations in Queensland. It was about time.
Michael McKenna – The Australian, May 23, 2008
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,,23744270-23289,00.html
Xstrata's Mount Isa copper mine was named the country's biggest
polluter in the annual National Pollutant Inventory data released last
week. Figures for 2006-7 show the mine ranks highest in the country
for zinc, sulphur dioxide, lead, copper, cadmium, arsenic and antimony
emissions. The figures measure soil and water as well as airborne
emissions.
Clive Sam, a Cultural Ranger for the Kalkadoon Tribal Council, is
upset by the pollution. "Our country has been just destroyed by
greed," he says. "It makes me feel terrible... It's become hard for us
to get our bush medicines - some days it can even be hard to breathe."
He says his kids were fine when they lived in Brisbane for several
years, but "the moment we move back here they play in the dirt here
and they break out in sores".
Jennifer Mills - New Matilda, 10 Apr 2008
http://www.newmatilda.com/2008/04/09/welcome-xstrata-country
http://www.sacredland.org/weblog/tag/xstrata
"Xstrata is now working on diverting the river by 5.5km as part of a project by McArthur River Mining (MRM) to extend the mine's life by turning it from underground to open cut. About 100 people from four language groups on Wednesday gathered to farewell the sacred sites they say will be destroyed by the project. But police stepped in on behalf of MRM and prevented them from entering the mine site.
"Xstrata has now stopped the traditional owners again when all they want is to hold a ceremony at their sacred sites because those sites may not be there for much longer," said Northern Land Council (NLC) chief executive Kim Hill.
He said MRM and Xstrata could be guilty of an offence under the NT Aboriginal Sacred Sites Act."
http://news.theage.com.au/national/mining-giant-stops-aborigines-ceremony-20080619-2t92.html
"Government documents show the Xstrata mine receives about $100 million in subsidized electricity. The government had hoped that the mine would pay mineral royalties, but it has consistently operated at a loss. Following development of the project, the mining company failed to negotiate an agreement with or pay royalties to the local Aboriginal groups, the traditional owners who possess the land title."
888 IS AN EXHIBITION COINCIDING WITH THE BEIJING OLYMPICS This August, China hosts the world's largest event, yet behind the spectacle and glamour exist countless other stories.