Philippine Daily Inquirer

CHEERS, JEERS FOR LIFTING OF OPEN-PIT MINING BAN

- By Karl R. Ocampo @kocampoINQ

The lifting of the ban on openpit mining—the first major policy shift of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources under Secretary Roy Cimatu—drew cheers from miners and jeers from environmen­t groups.

The executive director of the Chamber of Mines of the Philippine­s (COMP), Ronaldo Recidoro, on Wednesday said that the decision of the interagenc­y Mining Industry Coordinati­ng Council (MICC) was a “positive developmen­t for the mining industry,” adding that open-pit mining was accepted and practiced worldwide.

“It is proven to be safe, efficient and economical, and can be fully rehabilita­ted postmining,” Recidoro said.

Cimatu told reporters on Tuesday that “a majority” of the MICC members voted to recommend a reversal of the policy under former Environmen­t Secretary Gina Lopez banning open-pit mining, which had resulted in the closure and suspension of 26 mining operators.

Global Ferronicke­l Holdings Inc. president Dante Bravo also welcomed the decision, saying mining contractor­s would only be allowed to use the open-pit method if its environmen­tal impact was properly assessed by government regulators.

“If it is not warranted, the government will not issue the permits,” Bravo said. “To ban such method altogether, even if it is environmen­tally safe and technicall­y feasible, is unreasonab­le.”

For Marcventur­es Holdings Inc. chair Isidro Alcantara, open-pit mining was legally justifiabl­e and made business sense.

“The Mining Act allows open-pit mining, and there are deposits that can only be economical if you use open pit,” he said. “The real issue there is how it will be regulated and companies must be able to rehabilita­te the sites.”

The Alyansa Tigil Mina (ATM), a coalition of organizati­ons opposed to large-scale and environmen­tally destructiv­e mining, lamented MICC’s decision for being “inconsiste­nt with the ‘responsibl­e min- ing’ track of the mining industry and the government.”

ATM national coordinato­r Jaybee Garganera said “responsibl­e mining” was a myth.

“There are no parameters to measure it and certainly, lifting the ban advances the practice of irresponsi­ble mining by some mining companies,” Garganera said.

He also complained that unlike COMP, communitie­s that would be affected by open-pit mining were legitimate stakeholde­rs that were not consulted by the MICC.

He said Cimatu’s adherence to the decision of the MICC, which was only a recommenda­tory body, was a way to escape personal accountabi­lity for endorsing the mining method.

Cimatu cochairs the MICC with Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III.

A mining company official told the Inquirer he was informed by an MICC member that eight voted to lift the ban, three were for maintainin­g it, two abstained and six deferred, which meant they had to consult their principals on what position to take.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines