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  • Armenia: Copper mine sparks environmental outcry

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Feb 23 2007


    CIVIL SOCIETY
    ARMENIA: COPPER MINE SPARKS ENVIRONMENTAL OUTCRY

    Marianna Grigoryan 2/23/07


    The Armenian Ministry of Environmental Protection's recent decision
    to give the go-ahead to the development of a copper-molybdenum mine
    in northern Armenia has sparked considerable concern among
    environmentalists and related non-governmental organizations.

    "We consider the program of operation for the Teghut
    copper-molybdenum mine to be illegal," commented Hakob Sanasaryan,
    president of the Union of the Greens of Armenia, an activist group.
    "It is being implemented with gross violations of the law and without
    any environmental impact studies."

    The Teghut copper-molybdenum mine, located in the mountainous
    northern region of Lori, more than 200 kilometers north of Yerevan,
    was well known in Soviet times. At that time, its copper reserves
    were estimated at 450-500 million tons. In the 1970s, a ban was
    placed on development of the mine to preserve the surrounding virgin
    forests and the fauna they contained.

    However, in the push to adapt to economic changes, that ban has now
    been lifted.

    "We were asked `Is it worth or not?' We said, `Yes, it is,'" Minister
    of Environmental Protection Vardan Ayvazian told a June 2006 press
    conference in response to a question about the development of the
    Teghut mine. Final government approval for exploitation of the
    territory came in November 2006. "Wealth is contained here, and the
    environmental damage must be compensated."

    No one doubts the mine's earning potential. Currently, the
    established reserves in Teghut make 1.6 million tonnes of copper and
    99,000 tonnes of molybdenum, a metal primarily incorporated into
    alloys to strengthen steel for pipelines and planes, among other
    uses. Teghut's reserves rank it as Armenia's second largest
    copper-molybdenum mine after the Zangezur mine in the town of
    Kajaran, according to Gagik Arzumanyan, director of Armenian Copper
    Program (ACP), the Armenian company awarded the tender to develop the
    mine in 2001.

    With copper prices running at record highs in recent years, tens of
    millions are expected in estimated profits, with a sizeable hunk of
    that amount going to the state in taxes. On February 22, copper was
    selling for $5.61 per metric tonne on the London Metal Exchange.

    ACP, part of a larger group of companies with operations in Armenia,
    Russia and Liechtenstein, plans to run the mine for 25-30 years as an
    open-pit mine, a far less expensive operating method, but one which
    removes the upper layer of earth, uprooting hectares of lime, beech,
    maple and nut trees.

    Environmentalists claim that 510 hectares of humus-rich,
    forest-covered land out of a local total of 670 hectares are expected
    to be lost; an estimated 127,700 trees will be logged.

    "A whole eco-system will vanish as a result, the [territory's
    ecological] balance will unequivocally be disturbed," commented
    environmental lawyer Nazeli Vardanian, director of the
    non-governmental organization Forests of Armenia. Expert assessments
    completed for the environment ministry give no estimates of the
    number of species of flora and fauna likely to be destroyed by the
    mining, or the effect on local humans, he charged.

    Experts from the state-run commission in Yerevan that approved the
    assessment for the ministry declined to speak with EurasiaNet.

    By contrast, a months-long independent investigation conducted by
    Vardanian, Union of the Greens of Armenia President Sanasarian and
    Social-Ecological Association President Srbuhi Harutyunian found that
    the mining will cause tremendous damage to the surrounding
    environment.

    According to these findings, if the mine is developed, 59 bird
    species, 55 mammal species, 10 reptile species, 29 species of fish
    and 191 plant species will be destroyed. Twenty-one of the mammals,
    11 of the fish species and nine of the plant species are registered
    in the International Red Book of Endangered Species published by the
    International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural
    Resources. Two of the plant species can only be found within the
    Teghut forests.

    Architectural monuments dating from the Bronze Age to the 12th
    century -- and ranging from tombs and churches to traditional
    Armenian khachkars, or stone crosses -- will also be destroyed,
    specialists fear.

    "The development of the Teghut mine will lay the grounds for an
    unprecedented process," said Union of the Greens President
    Sanasaryan. While mining has destroyed before parts of forests, he
    said, "there hasn't been a case until today that the whole territory
    allotted for mining is a natural forest."

    In response, Vardanian and his group say that there are "good"
    grounds for petitioning the prosecutor's office to have the
    ministry's allegedly incomplete environmental assessment thrown out.

    Optimism, however, does not run high that the group will succeed.
    Lawyer Vardanian claimed that Environmental Protection Minister
    Ayvazian has called the decision to restart the copper mine "a
    political decision, and no matter what you do, it will still be
    realized." The ministry failed to object to the 2001 tender for
    development of the mine, Vardanian and his associates claim.

    At a February 16 press conference, Minister Ayvazian characterized
    the government's position on the issue as "very tough."

    "As many as 100,000 cubic meters of wood are logged in Armenia a year
    legally, and 600-700,000 illegally, and I see no problem and
    difficulty in connection with the tree cutting in Teghut," Ayvazyan
    said. Logging will occur sector by sector, he added, and ACP will
    "carry out forest rehabilitation works in other areas."

    The Lori region in which the mine is situated is already considered
    by healthcare and environmental specialists to be an environmental
    disaster zone. According to Ministry of Health statistics, the rate
    of allergies and asthmatic diseases in the region is ten times higher
    than the national average. The rate of abnormal births in Lori is
    also one of the highest in Armenia.

    Environmentalists point at ongoing extractative activities in the
    region as the cause. Aside from Teghut, Lori contains an ore mine at
    Akhtala, a chemical plant at Vanadzor, a plant at Tumanyan that
    produces fire-resistant materials and a metallurgical plant at
    Alaverdi, also run by the Armenian Copper Program. Since 1996, the
    Alaverdi plant has been operated without filters, leading to regular
    releases of sulfur dioxide and other harmful materials into the air.

    "The Lori region has lost the state of eco-balance, and the
    development of the Teghut mine will tremendously aggravate that
    situation," commented Srbuhi Harutyunyan.

    In response, ACP has pointed to the 1,400 jobs the reopened copper
    mine will bring to local residents. Poverty in the region runs
    rampant.

    According to the environmentalists, though, not all villagers are
    excited about the possibility of employment. More than half in the
    neighboring villages of Teghut and Shnokh have refused to sell their
    lands to the mine for exploitation, Vardanian said.

    "Elderly people cannot imagine how they can leave the place where
    they were born and live," he commented.


    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a reporter for the
    Armenianow.com weekly in Yerevan.
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