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Occupy Teghut?: Year Begins With New Protest Of Mining Exploitation

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  • Occupy Teghut?: Year Begins With New Protest Of Mining Exploitation

    OCCUPY TEGHUT?: YEAR BEGINS WITH NEW PROTEST OF MINING EXPLOITATION
    By Gayane Lazarian

    ArmeniaNow
    11.01.12 | 14:22

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    On January 15, a new initiative will be launched by "Let's Save
    Teghut Forest" environmental group, with the intention of reversing
    a government order to allow further mining exploitation.

    Enlarge Photo ACP general director Valery Mezhlumyan

    It has been more than four years -- since November 2007 -- that
    environmentalists have tried to stop the development of further
    copper and molybdenum processing near the village of Teghut in the
    Lori province, where even villagers who are employed by the Armenian
    Copper Program (ACP) Company have opposed further expansion. The
    Teghut and Shnogh villages of the Lori province are some four-six
    kilometers far from the mine; the population of Teghut is 976 people,
    of Shnogh is 3,139 people.

    Gor Hakobyan, leader of the action group says a group of protesters
    will travel to Teghut on Sunday to present new objections to
    construction of a tailings depot that would consume about 357 hectares
    of forest. The blasting phase of open-pit mining is expected to begin
    in mid-spring.

    On January 15, in the morning, participants of the initiative by buses
    will leave for Vanadzor, the Lori provincial center, where they will
    be joined by local activists. A short updating event will take place
    there, after which they will continue their journey to Teghut, where
    they will hold an action of protest walking about four kilometers.

    Hakobyan says that the new program of Teghut protection will be
    presented only on the day of their hiking tour.

    Chairman of Armenia~Rs Union of Greens Hakob Sanasaryan says that a
    Government decision reached in November 2007 giving permission for
    the company to expand has no legal basis, and it has reached based
    on unsubstantiated documents.

    There are miscalculations, money misuse, and falsifications in the
    project. Public hearings have not been held," Sanasaryan says.

    Yet since 2009, environmental organizations have lodged a claim in
    the administrative court of Armenia, litigating the decision of the
    Government, as well as the ministries of Nature Protection, and Energy
    and Natural Resources. They cite violations of the Constitution of
    Armenia, state laws, and Armenia's international obligations within
    the framework of the Aarhus Convention in the claim. The claim has
    been dismissed.

    In 2010, the same environmental organizations appealed to the
    corresponding commission of the Aarhus Convention in Geneva. In 2010
    they received a draft conclusion paper, stating that the Republic of
    Armenia had failed to secure efficient public participation in the
    process of decision making related to Teghut mining project.

    Environmentalist Karine Danielyan, who heads the "For Sustainable Human
    Development" NGO, says that as a result of the environmental struggle
    a reforestation, ecological and compensation program has been drafted,
    however, it will not pay back all the damages that will appear when
    the mine is developed.

    "The open-pit mining in such a unique forest area as Teghut proves
    that we have short-term thinking, and the short-term economic thinking
    is absolutely anti-ecological," Danielyan says.

    Unlike environmentalists, Minister of Nature Protection Aram
    Harutyunyan believes Teghut mining project is not a loss but rather
    an achievement.

    "We are not wrong about Teghut, it is a project which is confirmed by
    law and it has passed all the instances. It will be implemented under
    our control and will secure big profits for our country," Harutyunyan.

    Eighty one percent of the company's shares belong to the
    Liechtenstein-registered Valex F.M.Establishment Company, and 19
    percent to Russia-based entrepreneur, ACP general director Valery
    Mejlumyan.

    Mejlumyan said that more than $350 million will be invested in the
    construction project of Ore Processing Combine in Teghut and Teghut
    Copper and Molybdenum Mine development. The company has already
    invested more than $100 million in the construction works.

    "The remaining $250 million will be drawn in the upcoming two years.

    In fact, in two years the Ore Processing Combine in Teghut will start
    running and it will produce about 28,000 tons of copper concentrate
    annually," Mejlumyan said.

    Currently about 23,000 tons of copper concentrate is produced
    in Armenia, a great part of which is produced by Zangezur Copper
    Molybdenum Plant in Kajaran, Syunik province. After the development
    of Teghut mine, more than 50,000 tons of copper concentrate will be
    produced in Armenia annually.

    According to the State Revenue Committee, in 2010 about 116,000 tons
    of copper ore and concentrate were exported from Armenia, whereas
    in 2009 that index was less by 42 percent (81,500 tons). In 2010,
    at the expense of copper and other non-ferrous metals the volumes
    of export registered a 40 percent growth. In 2010, Armenia sold 210
    million dollars' worth of copper ore.

    Wires, cable, devices, heat exchangers, forged and molding sculptures,
    jewelry, art and household goods, etc., are made of copper. Copper
    combination is also used in making inorganic paints, artificial silk,
    as well as for fighting against plant diseases and agricultural
    vermin. Copper is also used in leather and fur production and in
    medicine.

    Environmentalists state that 170,833 trees will be cut as part of the
    company's exploitation. There are as many as 55,000 rare and 45,000
    valuable trees in the Teghut forests, as well as plants and animal
    species registered in the Red Book that could be endangered if the
    forests are destroyed.

    According to environmentalists, 1,491 hectares of land area are
    given for mining, and about 82 percent of that land (1,232 hectares)
    is forest area. If the project is implemented then 357 hectares
    forests will fully be logged. The waste will be disposed of by means
    of tailings to the gorge of the Dukanadzor River. The development of
    the mine will result in creation of about 500 million tons of tailings
    and 600 million tons of other kind of waste.

    Tailings, (also called mine dumps, slimes, tails, leach residue, or
    slickens) are the materials left over after the process of separating
    the valuable fraction from the uneconomic fraction (gangue) of an ore.

    Tailings are distinct from overburden or waste rock, which are the
    materials overlying an ore or mineral body that are displaced during
    mining without being processed. Land fertility is quite low in the
    areas which are polluted with tailings.

    It is feared that the tailings depots which contain silver, rhenium,
    tin, arsenic, molybdenum, copper, zinc, sulfuric compounds, as well
    as other chemicals which are used in mining and ore procession will
    pollute the rivers in the region. (There are four rivers there.)

    Helsinki Committee Chairman Avetik Ishkhanyan, who is worried about
    the Teghut issue, says that there is no mine development strategy in
    Armenia, and at least in 50 years the country will be fully robbed.

    There will be ruins in the places of the developed mines, and nothing
    will be left for future generations.

    "I have personally promised that if Teghut mine in developed I will
    go, sit and protest. We must unite," he concludes.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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