LETTER TO THE EDITOR
BAUXITE-MINING STILL POSES CLEAR
AND PRESENT DANGER
(Photo credits: Fuziah Salleh)
Malaysian Nature Society (MNS)
Selangor is disappointed that the Ministry of Water, Land, and Natural
Resources has made the decision to lift the moratorium on the extraction and
export of bauxite in Pahang (18 Feb).
The primary motivation for the decision
appears to be the high market demand for bauxite and the economic gains to be
made from it. The environment and public health and safety are merely secondary
considerations.
Although the Minister has
indicated that there will be new standard operating procedures (SOPs) and
tighter regulations in place, the public has yet to be informed of what these SOPs
are and how they compare with previous and existing safeguards, and how
transparent and effective the monitoring and enforcement measures will be.
Even as far back as 2016, SOPs
such as requiring bauxite to be transferred via safer pakamatic lorries,
rerouting lorries to avoid heavily populated areas and setting up a designated bauxite
stockpiling centre failed to stop industry players and enforcement agencies
from flouting the regulations with impunity. What assurance is there that this
time the same industry players and monitoring and enforcement agencies will not
put personal interest and profits before the environment and people?
Further, the proposed fine of
RM500,000 and three months’ imprisonment under the Pahang State Mineral Enactment
2001 appears to be too lenient for such a lucrative industry. There appears to
be no prerogative afforded to the enforcement bodies to shut down and ban
industry players found to be flouting the SOPs.
We must not lose sight of the
reasons why the moratorium was imposed in the first place. Intensive bauxite
mining and processing activities caused major contamination of water sources,
air and soil pollution, and an increase in health complaints, particularly
respiratory-related, from the local residents. The environmental and scientific
community had also reported that bauxite mining and processing had resulted in
the leaching of toxic heavy metals such as mercury, cadmium, lead and chromium
into river systems, poisoning fish and aquatic life and posing a danger to the
fishing and coastal communities.
The public has so far not been
informed of how wastewater and other waste materials from the bauxite mining
and processing activities will be treated and disposed of, and from where the
water for bauxite washing will be sourced. This raises concerns that there will
be a growth in illegal dumping grounds for the waste generated from the
resumption of bauxite mining and export activities.
News reports indicate that the
Pahang Mineral Operators Association would be regulating its own members and
activities. This again will raise the question of how objective, neutral and
effective they will be, considering that they have not demonstrated exemplary
commitment to environmental protection and public health and safety in 2015 and
2016 prior to the moratorium. There must be greater opportunity and space for
neutral civil society groups and environmental organisations to participate in
the monitoring and reporting process, and independent environmental auditors
must be engaged to inspect and report on the bauxite mining and exporting
activities without fear or favour.
MNS Selangor is not against
development or state governments managing their natural resources to maintain
economic growth. We are, however, in favour of the responsible management of
natural resources and greater transparency and accountability. Economic growth
cannot be sustainable or legitimate if it comes at the expense of the
environment and public health and safety.
WONG EE LYNN
MALAYSIAN NATURE SOCIETY (MNS) SELANGOR
No comments:
Post a Comment