About 40,000
cubic meters of wastewater from a copper mine has contaminated rivers in
Mexico. Federal officials are restricting water deliveries to urban areas,
including northern Sonora state's capital of Hermosillo.
Deutsche Welle, 11 Aug 2014
Mexico's
National Water Commission said on Monday it had been monitoring for chemicals
in the Sonora river and its tributary the Bacanuchi since an August 7 spill
caused by heavy rains at the Buenavista copper mine at Cananea. The extraction
site lies about 40 kilometers (25 miles) south of Mexico's border with the
United States.
Mexican
media said 10 million gallons of wastewater had turned the 420-kilometer-long
waterway orange, affecting 800,000 people.
Miner
blamed, remedial work ordered
Mexico's
environmental agency, PROFEPA, blamed the company Buenavista del Cobre and
ordered the neutralization of toxins, construction of dams to prevent further
incidents, and an analysis of the water's contamination level, among other
measures.
“In
addition to ordering the implementation of a total remediation plan, PROFEPA
initiated proceedings against Buenavista del Cobre to determine possible
sanctions,” the agency announced on its website.
According
to Sonora state's water agency, the affected towns include Arizpe, Banamichi,
San Felipe de Jesus, Aconchi, Baviacora and Ures, as well as Hermosillo, the
state capital, which derives a limited 3 percent of its fresh water from the
river. Fish and livestock have died from the poisoned water.
Accident
follows privatization drive
Sonora is
home to more than a quarter of Mexico's mining industry. Companies regularly
dig deep into the state's geological surface structures to extract gold,
copper, graphite and other metals and minerals.
Mexico's
federal government recently opened up the country's vital energy sectors such
as electricity generation and petrol production to private companies.
Several
hundred kilometers north, in the US state of Ohio, private agricultural firms
were accused recently of making the water in the Great Lake Erie unsuitable for drinking and bathing for several days.
mkg/ipj (AFP, AP)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.