Showing posts with label Brumadinho. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brumadinho. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 October 2019

Gold mining dam breaks in Mato Grosso and injures two people; meanwhile, the Brazilian president continues to defend the implementation of large-scale mining in the Amazon

Yesterday, the TB01 dam in the municipality of Nossa Senhora do Livramento, in Mato Grosso, broke up leaving two people injured. The tailings from gold mining flowed through an area of vegetation on the site, knocking down a high voltage pole that serves the region. The Civil Defense rules out the need to vacate the city, which is 30 kilometers away.

Mining in Brazil has already produced numerous environmental disasters. The crimes committed by the mining companies in the cities of Mariana, Bento Rodrigues and Brumadinho, in Minas Gerais, produced huge damage to the affected ecosystems and the region's economy. Such losses are so great that they are incalculable and in some cases irreversible.

As this blog post already pointed out, the landslide that occurred in Brumadinho dam of Vale on January 25 is an example. 250 people died. The tragedy was a direct result of the lack of public oversight and the policy of easing environmental licensing laws, which is widely advocated by the current government of Jair Bolsonaro and his Environment Minister Ricardo Salles, which want to apply this same policy to the Amazon region.

Yesterday, President Jair Bolsonaro, speaking to a group of prospectors, stated that "the interest in the Amazon isn't in the Indian or the fucking tree, it's in the ore." The statement took place in front of Planalto Palace after Bolsonaro received representatives of the group.

Bolsonaro wants to implement large-scale mining in the Amazon.

Tuesday, 11 June 2019

Industry in Pará has the worst result in 17 years

According to the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), the downturns in the production of mining and quarrying made the industry of Pará fall by 30.3% in April 2019, compared to March 2019. It was the biggest drop since the beginning of the historical series, and the third consecutive decline, accumulating losses of 38.8% in the period. Considering the first four months of the year, state production fell by 7.8%.

The main reasons for this decline were the risks of breaking down mining dams, such as occurred this year in Brumadinho (Minas Gerais), contamination of indigenous reserves and excessive rainfall. This contributed much to the fall in extractive production.

In addition to Pará, the states of Espírito Santo (-5.5%), Rio de Janeiro (-4.5%), Goiás (-1.4%) and Amazonas (-1.2% %). The survey also showed that 10 of the 15 sites increased production in April, with Pernambuco (8.3%), Bahia (7.4%), Northeast Region (6.1%) and Mato Grosso (5.1% ), which reversed the negative behavior of March.

São Paulo, the country's main industrial park, was up 2.4%, the most intense since June 2018, influenced by the vehicle sector.

Thursday, 30 May 2019

Brazilian GDP falls 0.2% in the first quarter of 2019

According to information published today (30.May.2019) by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), the GDP (Gross Domestic Product) in Brazil fell by 0.2% in the first quarter of 2019 in relation to the previous three months.

This is the first negative result of the Brazilian GDP since 2016. The figures released by the IBGE point to the risk of Brazil again suffering from the recession (when the country registers two consecutive quarters of decline in economic activity).

According to the IBGE, the rupture of the Vale dam in Brumadinho (MG), and its consequent effect on the result of the industry is among the main factors that brought down the economic activity of the country.

This landslide of Brumadinho dam of Vale occurred on January 25. 244 people died. The tragedy was a direct result of the lack of public oversight and the policy of easing environmental licensing laws, which is widely advocated by the current government of Jair Bolsonaro and his Environment Minister Ricardo Salles.

Among other things, Salles favors "self-certification." This means that the company itself will inspect its dams without the need for any prior environmental inspection by the government agencies for certain types of projects. According to Exame magazine, "not even the worst socio-environmental tragedy in Brazil, provoked by Vale in Minas Gerais, made the minister change his mind."

Now, with the possibility of a new tragedy in the Upper South dam of the Gongo Soco Mine, in Barão de Cocais, Minas Gerais, which can break at any moment, it puts the lives of the region's inhabitants at risk, it can cause another immense disaster environmental and make the Brazilian economic situation even worse.

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