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Environmentalists Again Warn Of Damage Caused By Mines

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  • Environmentalists Again Warn Of Damage Caused By Mines

    ENVIRONMENTALISTS AGAIN WARN OF DAMAGE CAUSED BY MINES
    By Gohar Abrahamyan

    ArmeniaNow
    21.06.11 | 13:54

    Armenian environmentalists continue to issue warnings about possible
    ecological consequences of the use of iron mines, such as those
    situated in Abovyan, Hrazdan and Svarants. They sent letters to this
    effect to a number of senior officials in Armenia, but haven't heard
    from them yet.

    Development of a total of about 500 mines in Armenia accounts for
    only 3-4 percent of the country's gross domestic product, while the
    damage caused by them is incomparably higher, argue environmentalists.

    "The actual recycled material, that is metal, that goes for export or
    is used otherwise makes only 0.7-0.8 percent, while about 99 percent
    is the waste, that is the tailings that remain in nature poisoning
    the environment," says head of the Association "For Sustainable
    Human Development" NGO Karine Danielyan, who adds that 98 percent
    of industrial waste in Armenia originates in the southern Syunik
    province, while Lori in the north of the country accounts for 2
    percent of wastes.

    Specialists remind that mining, agriculture and tourism that all are
    considered to be priority sectors for development in Armenia are
    incompatible, since air pollution caused by mining is unfavorable
    for either agriculture or tourism.

    Ruben Yadoyan, a candidate of geological-mineralogical sciences,
    says that the mines in Hrazdan and Abovyan will have a direct effect
    on Armenia's fresh drinking water.

    Among other things specialists suggest setting up manufactures working
    on the basis of minerals rather than export them, so as to stop being
    a mining adjunct, as well as using 15 tailings depots as material
    resources, something that they contend modern technologies allow to do.

    Still a month ago joint letters consisting of several points were sent
    by experts and a dozen NGOs to Armenia's president, prime minister
    and parliament speaker. The officials forwarded the letters to the
    Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources, but environmentalists say
    no reply has been received from there yet.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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