But red dust from the iron ore train’ll
Make a white cocky all stained and rusty
And rich boys and the royal family
They needed water for their dusty money
– ‘Yurala’, Spinifex Gum Choir
Paradigm Shift 4zzz fm 102.1 Friday 20 Sept 2019 at noon.
Interviews
Helen Hamley – Big Music at the Risk, a community event trying to bring city and country people together.
Clem Campbell (Former ALP MLA for Bundaberg, United Nations Association Qld) – speaks about International Day of Peace event featuring Sophie McNeill, ABC Correspondent in the Middle East who says We can’t say we didn’t know about the carnage in Syria, Yemen and Gaza.
Rebekah Hayden (Rainforest Action Group) – SolGold Mining for copper in Ecuador placing the rainforest at risk.
Environmental impact of Mining Copper in Ecuador
BMW have signed a deal with BHP Billition to mine copper for its Electric Vehicles. BHP owns shares in SolGold which holds the most mining concessions for copper (& gold) in Ecuador. What is the environmental impact of BMW buying copper for its Electric Cars?
In Pallatango, Chimborazo, the Chillanes concession is on top of the biggest geological faultline in Ecuador . The Pallatanga fault (PF) is a prominent NNE-SSW strike-slip fault crossing Central Ecuador. This structure is suspected to have hosted large earthquakes, including the 1797 Riobamba event which caused severe destructions to buildings and a heavy death toll of more than 12,000 people, as well as widespread secondary effects like landsliding, liquefaction and surface cracking.
A mine in the region would be extremely unsafe and a tailings dams in the area at risk of collapse were an earthquake to occur. What will SolGold do to ensure the safety of mines and tailings facilities in this area, and how will SolGold protect local communities from harm if earthquake damage to a mine impacts water sources or causes a threat to life?
Most of southern Ecuador’s cities and towns are already experiencing growing water shortages due to rapid population growth. In Gualel, where there are major water sources, locals are concerned about water contamination by mining activity. These sources not only provide water for the region but are considered sacred. Mining in this area could endanger both their livelihood and their way of lif e. What is SolGold planning to do to combat any riskto water?
What will SolGold do in Bolivar to safeguard both communities access to water, and contamination of these sources? How will SolGold protect against the impact on forest and wildlife in the region?
Playlist
Yellow Bird – Follow the River
Spinifex Gum Band – Yurala
Spinifex Gum Band – Dream Baby Dream
References
Security issues (in Ecuador)
In August 2019, guerrillas from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) announced that the 2016 peace deal had failed, and armed revolution was r e-established in Colombia. The criminal group has been spreading its actions down into Ecuador ever since the deal was established in 2016.

Cascabel is located in close proximity to the Colombian/Ecuadorian border, an area the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) advises as a DO NOT TRAVEL area, where regular travel insurance policies are void and the Australian Government says it is unlikely to be able to provide consular assistance. The Cascabel mining site at Alpala is 100km from this zone , with entry into proposed mining through Roca Fuerte almost on the boundary of the DO NOT TRAVEL zone.
In its 2019 Preliminary Economic Assessment , SolGold suggested that mining material will be transported via pipeline, 60 km north-west towards San Lorenzo. This route goes through an area of significant risk where organised militia with links to FARC conducted a number of bombings in 2018. The police station at San Lorenzo was car bombed in January 2018. A trap bomb loaded with shrapnel killed three and wounded eleven Ecuadorian marines on 19 March 2018.
A few weeks later , a second car bomb exploded under a police car.
In April , three journalist s were found murdered by dissidents, a bridge was bombed near Viche, and several bombs were placed in transmission towers.
As a result , the President of Ecuador , Lenin Moreno, declared a limited State of Emergency in the cities of San Lorenzo and Eloy Alfaro to enhance police and military authority . There were also attacks on civilians and military patrols at the border town of Mataje – now a ghost town with civilians fleeing the embattled area.
This is the area that SolGold have proposed as a route for the pipeline. How will SolGold protect 60 kilometres of pipeline carrying valuable mineralised ore in such dangerous terrain?
SolGold has suggested power for the mine will partially come from Colombia. Both FARC and Colombia ‘ s National Liberation Army (ELN) have targeted energy infrastructure inside Colombia over the years. Up to April 2019 there were about 20 attacks on Colombian pipelines in 2019. The 485-mile (780-km) Cano Limon pipeline was offline for most of 2018 because of more than 80 bombings. How will SolGold safeguard electricity coming from Colombia?
SolGold states in the PEA that workers at Alpala will bebussed in each day from Ibarra . This means that the Alpala mine site itself will have few people staying at the mine overnight except security staff. Given the precarious location of the mine, it is apparent that the mine could become a magnet for criminal groups and armed militia in the region.
We are concerned that not only will the mine be built in a politically unstable and dangerous region, but the pipeline and mining infrastructure, could come under attack or be sabotaged, as could the mine itself. How does SolGold plan to protect such a risky investment?
SolGold has employed the services of security firm G4S to look after its Cascabel security. G4S is facing a raft of lawsuits from staff who have alleged they were forced to work in unsafe conditions on Manus Island, among other places, with security guard Gregory Wisely alleging that after suffering a head injury during a riot, G4S did not allow him to stop work, and that he was not provided with any equipment to radio for help. Documents from a separate legal case allege G4S employed “incompetent and malicious security staff, who escalated the violence at the premises during the riots and contributed to the death of one transferee and the injury to other transferees“. The killed man was asylum seeker Reza Barati.
Can SolGold assure us that G4S will not put staff in similar danger at Cascabel if there is to be an altercation with illegal miners, criminal gangs or armed militia? Can SolGold ensure that G4S will not employ ex-FARC militia, individuals or groups with links to cartels, or guards with military training who might exacerbate the situation at Cascabel? Are G4S responsible for SolGold’s security across Ecuador, or will military or police be used at other concessions? What will the security costs be for all 72 concessions?
Illegal mining
Illegal mining in close proximity to the Cascabel concession has occurred at El Cielito (approx. 5-lOkm north of Cascabel) between 2017 and 2019; and the largest illegal mining operation in Ecuador in almost 30 years, occurred on a mining concession called lmba 2, owned by Australian mining magnate Gina Rinehart . The illegal mine, called El Triunfo, is only 10km south of Alpala. At this location over 10,000 illegal miners operated between November 2017 and July 2019. The miners were eventually evicted after the Moreno Government sent in 2000 troops and hundreds of police officers, however miners are starting to return to the area . Gina Rinehart and the Ecuadorian government are now purportedly in negotiations over who pays for the involvement of the military, with the Government saying it is the responsibility of mining companies to pay for security on their concessions.
How is SolGold safeguarding its concessions from illegal miners? What do you plan to do if a gold rush occurs at Alpala or its other concessions? How will SolGold afford to evict thousands of miners off its concessions in these instances, when there is already so many other factors that are delaying mining at the site?
SolGold’s links to Ecuadorian Military Pension Funds through BHP
In March 2019, BHP signed a US$82M Non-Binding LOI with Luminex Resources for the Condor Project in the south-west of Ecuador, located 55 km south of Ecuacorrient e’ s Mirador mine and 31 km south of Lundin Gold-Newcrest’s Fruta del Norte mine. Key elements of the deal give BHP the right to earn up to 70% ownership interest by investing an aggregate amount up to US$75M, with BHP making cash payments to Luminex up to US$7M.
The Condor Project is 10%4 owned by the Institute de Seguridad Social de las Fuerzas Armadas (“ISSFA”), which is the pension fund for Ecuador’s armed forces personnel.
On 5th August 2019, the local Shuar community held a non-violent protest against the Luminex/BHP Tarqui project. The military coincidentally turned up at the same time to conduct a “gun control operation” .
“First the police came. They left after talking to people and seeing that it was peaceful action. Now the army arrives saying they want to do a gun control.
What does SolGold think about the ethics of one of their key investors being involved with the Ecuadorian military? Seeing as BHP is a major investor in SolGold can we expect the military to coincidentally turn up when communities protest against other SolGold, BHP and Liminex projects? Or does the military only protect Luminex projects?
Community impact and lack of consultation
Despite the announcement by the Constitutional Court on Thursday 19th September, which denied Yaku Perez from calling a provincial referendum on mining, there is strong community opposition to mining. Following are testimonials from key community figures from all over Ecuador who denounce the operations of SolGold on their land.
Testimonials from communities impacted by So/Gold operations
1. “My name is Marcios Cordoba. I am from Bolivar province. We have concessions belonging to the mining company SolGold. These same concessions are located within the source areas for our water, where we also have waterfalls, lakes, and some archaeological sites. Importantly, I want to say that we totally and absolutely reject the mining company, and we are not going to permit entry or exploration within our territories . To date they have no social license, have done almost no socialization, and have done no consultation whatsoever
2. “My name is Abigail Rosero. I am from the canton of Pallatanga, in Chimborazo Province … Our territory has been concessioned to an Australian company by the name of Green Rock Resources, a subsidiary of SolGold. The land has been concessioned arbitrarily , without authorisation , without our knowledge and with no previous consultation to our communities. On top of this, we sit on the biggest geological faultline in Ecuador. They have been completing technical studies [of the area] . We say to them that Pallatanga is a beautiful place, with the best climate in the world. Our message to the directors of this Australian company is that they must stop entering our territory. Some of our ancestors are indigenous to here, a valiant people. And so they can’t enter Palanga. “
“These companies are inhumane… they came in arbitrarily, without consent from any of the communities. We’re coming to realize that we are arriving at a second colonisation in our country. I am angry that they think we don’t have rights, that we are just animals and indigenous peoples. We are honest people, and mining companies have a lot of money who are destroying our territories. In Pallatanga, we want them out.”
3. “My name is Soraya Chamba. I come from Carchi , Chical parish and from the community of Ontal … We’ re deceived as if we’re a subject of no value. They deceive people into sign in g [documents], and they do the same to community leaders and parish authorities; and then they proceed to socialise the communities… So this is a very clear message we wish to send to President Moreno: that there should be no exploitation of places like Cerro Golondrinas. For me, it ‘ s that they can come in, take our money and fly out again, but after that we have to survive. After that we’re left with con flicts, abuses, cases of prostitution that affect many, many people; they displace us…. It ‘ s for this reason that we continue to fight.”
4. Domingo Ankuash (Pueblo Shuar, Morena Santiago): ”They bribe leaders and threaten people, and then negotiations start between those companies… This is why we reject any company that is trying to enter without consult at ion . We are accused as guerrillas. They come in with the army and the police to kill, follow and displace the leaders who are defending the territory. We reject all companies not just this one. They are walking all over the laws of this country. For those of us who live there, they let us know when they are giving us bullets… They are all the same for us and we reject them all. They should leave our territory and let us live in peace . We live on banana and cassava. We don’t live on gold or uranium… They are the ones who are destroying the planet , but we defend it at the cost of our own lives. There are no benefits for indigenous peoples nor mestizos in Ecuador. 40 years of petroleum extraction and we have nothing.”
5. “I am Manuel Angamarca . I come from the parish of Gualel, in the canton and province of Leja . In Gualel there are difficulties with mining, and with the company called SolGold. In reality they have violated this place; they have violated with helicopters making noise, they have not respected human life here. They’ve passed over normal civilities that exist and are part of life here. More than this, they did not consult us before entering to do exploration activities, as mandated in the Constitution and in mining laws. Also, they have collected signatures from defenceless people who understand practically nothing; these people are offered a whole list of things, but they don’t understand that the other face of money is destruction . In this place there are water sources, which support our livelihoods. For this reason we can’ t conceive of permitting this illegal entry, because water is our life. All of Gualel is a source of water, and for this reason, the Constitution tells us clearly that we cannot permit these violations.”
“… Gualel has sacred water holes and homes everywhere, but the company didn’t respect t his. There is no pre and informed consent . They went over everything with this lack of respect. And they collect falsified signatures from elderly people and children to try and enter and get authorization to get their licence.”
6. “I am Benjamin Macas and I am part of the southern assembly from the province of Loja. SolGold , through their subsidiary Green Rock Resources, owns the concessions Cisne 2A, 2B and 2C. They are undertaking initial exploration studies. This is the location of the original sanctuary of El Cisne . In mid -August, a thousand residents
made their way from this parish to Loja. The Loja municipality, in response to our local population, has declared Loja Canton free of metals mining. On 27th and 28August, a large portion of the population marched to the city of Loja to support this resolution and demand the mining companies to leave. I believe that this shows the extent to which the population here does not permit our lands to be destroyed by metals mining.”
We are concerned that correct consultation processes have not taken place, especially given the Ecuadorian constitution which requires prior and informed consent by communities, and which enshrines the rights of nature and Indigenous people in the constitution . This is particularly important given recent legal wins, for example in April 2019 where the Waorani won a landmark case protecting their land from oil concessions , and in the case of Rio Blanco last year, where the Chinese -owned mine was forced to close over claims communities were not consulted about mining on their land. A case won in the Provincial Court of lmbabura in June barred BHP/Codelco from entering concessions at the Manduriacu Reserve without permission .
What does SolGold say about statements that say authorisation has been falsified and communities have not been consulted? What does SolGold say about territories that have been entered illegally, or explored without permission by SolGold employees? What does SolGold say about permissions being falsified or been obtained with force or coercion, or obtained from someone who does not live in the area? What does SolGold say about aerial magnetic explorations that took place without consent or authorisation of the community?
Environmental impact of Mining Copper for Electric Cars
In Pallatango, Chimborazo, the Chillanes concession is on top of the biggest geological faultline in Ecuador . The Pallatanga fault (PF) is a prominent NNE-SSW strike-slip fault crossing Central Ecuador . This structure is suspected to have hosted large earthquakes, including the 1797 Riobamba event which caused severe destructions to buildings and a heavy death toll of more than 12,000 people, as well as widespread secondary effects like landsliding, liquefaction and surface cracking.
A mine in the region would be extremely unsafe and a tailings dams in the area at risk of collapse were an earthquake to occur. What will SolGold do to ensure the safety of mines and tailings facilities in this area, and how will SolGold protect local communities from harm if earthquake damage to a mine impacts water sources or causes a threat to life?
Most of southern Ecuador’s cities and towns are already experiencing growing water shortages due to rapid population growth. In Gualel , where there are major water sources, locals are concerned about water contamination by mining activit y. These sources not only provide water for the region but are considered sacred. Mining in this area could endanger both their livelihood and their way of lif e. What is SolGold planning to do to combat any risk
to water?
What will SolGold do in Bolivar to safeguard both communities access to water, and contamination of these sources? How will SolGold protect against the impact on forest and wildlife in the region?
Cascabel
How deep are the ore deposits at Cascabel? Previous studies indicate they are located at around 2000 metres but this is not being reported to shareholders. A mine 2 kilometres deep in an area of high rainfall and earthquake risk is likely to have significant impact and risk. The depth would also complicate extraction of the ore, and the cost of mining in the area. We are concerned that SolGold does not have the capital to build such a mine , particularly when it has so many other priority projects on the go. Will SolGold sell off Cascabel to another company? What will the impact be on SolGold shareholders if this is the
case?
The Cascabel concession is part of the Mira River basin, and is surrounded by mature primary and secondary forests that house endangered species, and protect pristine microbasin s. The entire Cascabel concession is part of the catchment for the Mira River which then runs through Colombia . Any contaminants that put this river system at risk could cause an international incident.
We are concerned about the impacts of the mine and related infrastructure on the local ecosystem, as well as the toxic waste generated by mining activities.
SolGold itself has said that it will extract 2.4 billion tonnes of ore from the mine. Based on that figure, we estimate the tailings generated by this mine would amount to at least l km
(1,000,000,000 m\ and could possibly exceed 2km3 over the life of the mine. To put these figures in perspective, the capacity of the largest lake in Ecuador – Lake Quilotoa is 0.35km,making tailings produced enough to fill the lake three times over, at a conservative estimate.
In their preliminary reports, SolGold states that decisions regarding the management of tailings are still in preparation . Can SolGold guarantee that the mined rocks do not contain pyrites or monosulphides, and can you guarantee that SolGold/ENSA will maintain tailings dams in the Cascabel concession for hundreds of years to ensure the toxicity of this waste is safely contained?
Given that the mine is in an area of high rainfall and earthquake risk, can SolGold guarantee that the structure of tailings dams built on the Cascabel concession will be sound and will not be vulnerable to earthquakes, overflow from heavy rain or increased waste volumes, as occurred with the Vale/BHP disaster in Bento Rodrigues in November 2015, or that of Brumadihno, where 300 Brazilians died when the tailings pool collapsed in January 2019? We understand that SolGold have very limited experience in mine const ruct ion . The approval of a record-height tailings dam at Mirador leaves us highly concerned that similar foolhardy constructions will be approved at Cascabel.
We are concerned that Alpala will not be the only mine constructed in the Cascabel concession. From SolGold’s reports, we are given to understand that there are several other ore bodies that ENSA/SolGold are exploring within the concession. Can SolGold disclose if this is the case, and if these ore bodies will be block cave mined individually, or absorbed into one large super-mine several kilometres in size?
Cornerstone, BHP and Newcrest
We understand that SolGold and Cornerstone have been at loggerheads for some time , especially since the failed buyout of Cornerstone earlier this year. Can you update us on your relationship with Cornerstone? How about BHP and Newcrest? Is SolGold at risk of take over?
For more info http://www.rainforestactiongroup.org or write to info@rainforestactiongroup.org
Reblogged this on Workers BushTelegraph.
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