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Comments on Shethongmon mining
Saturday, 19 May 2007
Following report was filed by the Environment and Development Desk of
the Department of Information and International Relations, Central Tibetan
Administration, on 27 April 2007, at the conclusion a two-day roundtable
meeting on Shethongmon mining, held in London, UK:
TIBETAN PARTICIPANTS FROM Dharamsala, India, appreciate the
invitation from TibetInfoNet to attend the Shethongmon Roundtable and meet
with representatives of HDI / Continental Minerals, which plans to mine
gold, copper and silver at Shetongmon in central Tibet.
Tenzin Tsultrim and Dhondup Dolma, researchers from the Environment and
Development Desk of Department of Information and International Relations,
are glad to discuss related issues with anyone proposing
"development" for Tibet that is aimed at directly benefiting the
Tibetan people. Our main concerns are the well-being of the Tibetan people
and the environmental impacts of a mine that may operate for as long as 40
years or more. We base our response entirely on the evidence.
In this situation, the mining companies Continental Minerals, and its
Chinese state-owned major equity partner Jinchuan Nonferrous Metals
Corporation, have made information available, enabling us to assess the
proposed mine against the Guidelines for International Development
Projects and Sustainable Development in Tibet, which was issued by Central
Tibetan Administration in 2004 for just such a situation as this.
These Guidelines, framed in accordance with the environmental
protection and sustainable development practices across the world, express
the will of the Tibetan people as a whole. They establish general
principles and specific practices of development suited to the human needs
of the Tibetan people and their environment. Tibet’s fragile environment
has also global significance. There are strong evidence to prove that a
sustainable and healthy environment of Tibet, also known as the Roof of
the World, can provide a positive service toward the betterment of the
environmental situation of the world in general and Asia in particular.
The Tibetan Guidelines therefore provides a clear guidance to all
outside project promoters and investors, and helps to establish standards,
which are to be met if projects, such as this mining project, are to be
acceptable in Tibet. Our response to this project, which will dig about
ten million tons of rock a year out of the Tibetan earth, is based
entirely on these well-known Guidelines, and we expect anyone who
sincerely wants to benefit Tibet and the Tibetan people to also base their
plans on these Guidelines, which could serve as the basis for a mining
code governing this project in all aspects.
According to our research study, this project fails to comply with the
Tibetan Guidelines for the following reasons:
1. It is on a scale that is too large to be beneficial locally to the
Tibetan people.
2. It depletes precious Tibetan resources for the profit of distant
Chinese state-owned partners and a Canadian company, with only modest
royalties provided at provincial level and inadequate compensation
locally.
3. The location is only less than a kilometre from the Yarlung Tsangpo
River, which is the great waterway not only of Tibet but also India and
Bangladesh. Bangladesh already faces an arsenic crisis in its water. If
the highly acid toxic wastes produced by this mine during 40 years of
mining, or after mining ceases, should ever seep into the Yarlung Tsangpo,
the lives of a hundred million people downstream will be at risk.
4. Mining depletes the heritage of Tibet, with no acknowledgement that
all Tibetans, other than some local people, are the losers. There is not
even a resource depletion tax.
5. Never before has mining on such a scale happened in Tibet. There is
nothing inevitable about a mine that increases China’s copper production
by little more than one per cent, but impacts negatively on an area close
to one of Tibet’s most historic town, namely Shigatse. The large number
of mines in Tibet, on a much smaller scale, invariably caused destruction,
and provided opportunities for an uncontrolled influx of Chinese immigrant
workers into Tibet, which marginalises the Tibetan people in their own
land.
6. Local communities in the areas affected by mining have had no
opportunity to seek and obtain independent expert advice on short and long
term consequences of mining. There has been no satisfactory program of
education, in close cooperation with local communities, establishing a
local learning community able to consider carefully the many complexities
of mining technologies and techniques. Only after a full process of action
research run by local people is it possible to contemplate such a project.
7. The above points, among many others, are only a preliminary listing
of our Tibetan concerns.
We look forward to more discussion, clarification and further deepening
of our understanding of this project. The companies (Continental and
Jinchuan) can show their good faith by not proceeding with obtaining a
Mining Licence until all the above matters have been resolved, in
accordance with the Guidelines for International Development Projects and
Sustainable Development in Tibet.
| --Tenzin Tsultrim & Dhondup Dolma, Environment
and Development Desk, DIIR |
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