Dubai Telegraph - Ten years after Brazil mine disaster, pollution persists

EUR -
AED 4.343991
AFN 76.884874
ALL 96.520125
AMD 445.950658
ANG 2.117385
AOA 1084.667521
ARS 1709.12993
AUD 1.680785
AWG 2.132076
AZN 2.012595
BAM 1.955187
BBD 2.373265
BDT 144.004819
BGN 1.986433
BHD 0.445981
BIF 3491.5193
BMD 1.182844
BND 1.497836
BOB 8.142273
BRL 6.200345
BSD 1.178335
BTN 106.463047
BWP 16.275962
BYN 3.376155
BYR 23183.740137
BZD 2.369866
CAD 1.612831
CDF 2602.256407
CHF 0.917325
CLF 0.025762
CLP 1017.24551
CNY 8.206809
CNH 8.202673
COP 4293.226506
CRC 585.218862
CUC 1.182844
CUP 31.345363
CVE 110.228086
CZK 24.357154
DJF 209.835052
DKK 7.469174
DOP 74.197034
DZD 153.567459
EGP 55.523759
ERN 17.742658
ETB 182.779826
FJD 2.598594
FKP 0.866422
GBP 0.861844
GEL 3.187793
GGP 0.866422
GHS 12.908677
GIP 0.866422
GMD 86.347446
GNF 10337.80023
GTQ 9.037973
GYD 246.517445
HKD 9.242553
HNL 31.132364
HRK 7.534245
HTG 154.56216
HUF 380.742072
IDR 19852.851758
ILS 3.653385
IMP 0.866422
INR 106.767153
IQD 1543.622216
IRR 49827.298822
ISK 145.004923
JEP 0.866422
JMD 184.662843
JOD 0.838611
JPY 185.045242
KES 152.587238
KGS 103.439688
KHR 4754.528372
KMF 494.42924
KPW 1064.544412
KRW 1720.481772
KWD 0.363535
KYD 0.981996
KZT 590.767145
LAK 25346.154823
LBP 105521.038983
LKR 364.727109
LRD 219.172162
LSL 18.873558
LTL 3.49263
LVL 0.71549
LYD 7.449694
MAD 10.80868
MDL 19.954824
MGA 5222.383561
MKD 61.623582
MMK 2484.114015
MNT 4220.894517
MOP 9.482485
MRU 47.03944
MUR 54.26887
MVR 18.275306
MWK 2043.267565
MXN 20.377378
MYR 4.647984
MZN 75.406562
NAD 18.873558
NGN 1633.933387
NIO 43.366577
NOK 11.394334
NPR 170.341276
NZD 1.957045
OMR 0.454812
PAB 1.178305
PEN 3.966855
PGK 5.048437
PHP 69.781905
PKR 329.554396
PLN 4.222942
PYG 7817.580292
QAR 4.284665
RON 5.094866
RSD 117.420919
RUB 91.128863
RWF 1719.767695
SAR 4.435752
SBD 9.531476
SCR 16.575558
SDG 711.484598
SEK 10.543905
SGD 1.502436
SHP 0.887439
SLE 28.950113
SLL 24803.64397
SOS 672.291911
SRD 45.083502
STD 24482.480257
STN 24.492419
SVC 10.310809
SYP 13081.75053
SZL 18.880156
THB 37.392043
TJS 11.011599
TMT 4.151782
TND 3.407359
TOP 2.848004
TRY 51.457238
TTD 7.98153
TWD 37.324585
TZS 3059.473155
UAH 50.994616
UGX 4200.593289
USD 1.182844
UYU 45.384801
UZS 14425.474029
VES 439.59277
VND 30734.424074
VUV 141.394299
WST 3.224807
XAF 655.75403
XAG 0.013169
XAU 0.000233
XCD 3.196695
XCG 2.123643
XDR 0.815548
XOF 655.75403
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.96038
ZAR 18.886587
ZMK 10646.999568
ZMW 23.124842
ZWL 380.875248
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    -2.1000

    82.1

    -2.56%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    23.66

    -0.38%

  • RYCEF

    0.2600

    16.93

    +1.54%

  • NGG

    1.6200

    86.23

    +1.88%

  • CMSD

    -0.1400

    23.94

    -0.58%

  • GSK

    0.8700

    53.34

    +1.63%

  • BCC

    3.1800

    84.93

    +3.74%

  • RIO

    3.8500

    96.37

    +4%

  • AZN

    -4.0900

    184.32

    -2.22%

  • BCE

    0.2700

    26.1

    +1.03%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.12

    -0.23%

  • RELX

    -5.0200

    30.51

    -16.45%

  • BTI

    0.8800

    61.87

    +1.42%

  • VOD

    0.3400

    15.25

    +2.23%

  • BP

    1.1200

    38.82

    +2.89%

Ten years after Brazil mine disaster, pollution persists
Ten years after Brazil mine disaster, pollution persists / Photo: Ben STANSALL - AFP

Ten years after Brazil mine disaster, pollution persists

A decade after a dam collapsed in Brazil, sending a deluge of toxic mud into villages and waterways, residents complain of an inadequate cleanup and compensation by international mining firms.

Text size:

The 2015 dam collapse which killed 19 people was one of Brazil’s worst environmental disasters, with survivors saying the Doce River region north of Rio de Janeiro remains heavily polluted.

"The entire ecosystem around the river was destroyed," Marcelo Krenak, a leader of the Krenak Indigenous people, told AFP on the sidelines of a hearing in London held this week.

The hearing is part of a large-scale legal action brought by claimants seeking compensation from Australian mining giant BHP -- which, at the time of the disaster, had one of its global headquarters in the UK.

"My people, the culture, has always been linked to the river," Krenak said, wearing a traditional headdress with striking blue feathers.

"The medicinal plants that only existed in the river are contaminated, the soil is contaminated, so you cannot plant, you cannot use the river water for animals," he added.

Following a mega-trial that concluded in March, the claimants now await a decision from the British High Court in the coming weeks regarding BHP's liability for the disaster.

The Fundao tailings dam at an iron ore mine in Minas Gerais state was managed by Samarco, co-owned by BHP and Brazilian miner Vale.

The High Court is already preparing the second phase of the case to determine potential damages and compensation, which could begin in October 2026 if BHP is found liable.

- 'Terrible tragedy' -

The company told AFP that "the recovery of the Doce River, the water quality of which had already returned to pre-dam failure levels, remained a focus".

Acknowledging the "terrible tragedy", BHP said it is "committed to supporting Samarco to do what's right by the Brazilian people, communities, organisations, and environments affected by the dam failure".

BHP maintains that the compensation agreement it reached last year in Brazil -- worth around $31 billion -- provides a resolution.

However, a majority of the 620,000 claimants, including 46 municipalities, argue that they are not sufficiently covered by the deal and are instead seeking around £35 billion ($49 billion) in damages.

Krenak said the claimants will at a potential future hearing present "visual evidence, photos and videos of what was done, what caused it, and the damage it is causing to this day".

The city of Mariana, one of the areas hardest hit by the disaster, is seeking 28 billion Brazilian real ($5 billion) in compensation.

"Our hope is that here in London, the municipality will be heard because, in Brazil, we were not heard," Mayor of Mariana, Juliano Duarte, told AFP.

Duarte said he believes the British legal system will hold BHP accountable, which could pressure the company to negotiate directly with the claimants.

He said the municipality is "open" to negotiation but "will not accept crumbs like those that were offered in Brazil".

B.Gopalan--DT