Friday 22 June 2012

An Earth Summit Draws on Oil, Mining and Utility Largess

June 21, 2012, 2:02 pm

An Earth Summit Draws on Oil, Mining and Utility Largess


RIO DE JANEIRO - The cups at the water coolers here at Rio+20, the global sustainability conference taking place Wednesday through Friday, are made of rough biodegradable corn fiber rather than plastic. Vans running on second-generation ethanol made from sugar cane bagasse take conference members, free of charge, from the hotels on the Copacabana beach to the conference center an hour away.

There, speedy Wi-Fi is offered to tens of thousands of participants so they can avoid printing out Rio+20 documents, and biodiesel generators power the million square feet of conference grounds.
Some of this is financed by millions of dollars in financial support from Brazil's largest energy, extraction and petroleum corporations. Those include businesses like the mining giant Vale, voted the "worst company of the year" in the 2012 Public Eye Awards, and Eletrobras, the state electricity company, a partner with Vale in developing the Belo Monte dam project on the Xingu River.

Environmental activists oppose the project, saying that it will drive out thousands of indigenous and other people by drying up the river and causing them to lose their livelihoods. The government has emphasized that no indigenous people will be forcibly removed from their land by the project.

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, part of the Organization of American States, asked Brazil last year to suspend dam construction until an agreement was reached with the indigenous communities; the government declined.

Belo Monte is the largest among dozens of controversial dam projects planned in Brazil's Amazon region. Although various environmental groups have protested the Belo Monte project on the sidelines of Rio+20, relatively few seem to making a big point of the conference's corporate sponsorship.

Of the quarter-billion dollars or so that Brazil plans to spend on the conference, most -- some $210 million -- comes from a special government fund, according to official documents cited by the Brazilian newspaper Valor Econômico. About $10 million was contributed by each of the official Rio+20 partners, corporations including Vale, Eletrobras and Petrobras, the state oil company. The conference expenses primarily involve installations, logistics, transportation, accommodations and security. Some 20,000 soldiers, police officers, municipal guards and intelligence service agents have been deployed on Rio's streets for the event.

Friday, 4:56 p.m. | Updated Asked about its choice to accept corporate sponsorship from energy and mining companies, the Brazilian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that it has specifically sought to include corporations to "bring these industries closer to environmental-friendly standards." All companies that presented themselves as "willing partners" of Rio+20 were accepted, it added.
Eletrobras, which has a 49.98 percent stake in the Belo Monte dam, said in a statement that its sponsorship role was "appropriate" because of its investment in hydroelectric power, a clean energy source. It said that Brazil needed to increase its capacity by 5,000 to 6,000 megawatts a year to meet the demands of the nation's population of nearly 200 million, and that roughly 80 percent of potential hydroelectric production is in the Amazon region.

Vale, which is investing $1.5 billion in the dam and has a 9 percent stake in the project, said it was acting as a Rio+20 sponsor so that the conference would have "a larger dimension and visibility for society over all, given the themes that are being discussed, which are of great interest to the business."

Petrobras, which routinely finances cultural events and nongovernmental organizations in Brazil, is now aggressively developing (along with foreign oil companies) deepwater "pre-salt" oil reserves about 200 miles off Brazil's shores. The government has promoted the pre-salt find as a kind of national bounty set to catapult Brazil to the level of Arab oil-producing nations and elevate Venezuela's status as an oil exporter.

But environmental groups like Greenpeace have complained that consumption of oil from the pre-salt fields could add 35 billion tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere over the next 40 years. Petrobras's heavy investment in extracting the deepwater oil will assure that Brazil is petroleum-dependent for decades to come, the group adds.

The company emphasizes that it has been ranked on the Dow Jones Sustainability Index for six years and is a signatory of the United Nations Global Compact, which commits businesses to aligning their operations with high principles on the environment, human rights and other causes.

Such corporate participation in Rio+20 does not sit well with Danilo Chammas, a lawyer with Justiça nos Trilhos (Justice on the Trails), the group that nominated Vale for the Public Eye Award. The group took part in a 2,000-strong protest on Tuesday in front of the company's headquarters in Rio.
"It's a shame," he said, adding: "Many people should be questioning this."

Sunday 17 June 2012

VALE - Mining giant investigated over alleged Brazil environmental breaches

31/05/2012

Source: Greenwood Management ApS

One of the world’s largest mining firms is under investigation over claims that it contravened environmental laws put in place to protect Brazilian forests and native tribal land.

Brazil’s prosecutors office is looking into reports that Vale SA failed to replant destroyed forest land and improperly used Amazon Indian land when operating two huge copper mines in the Amazon region. The forest were reportedly damaged when the mining giant built a power line for the one of the mines.

The Sossego copper mine, which is the firm’s most productive copper mine – producing 109,000 tonnes last year – is being investigated over the claims that Vale improperly used Indian land. However, Vale emailed Reuters to defend its case, claiming that both of its copper mines were at least 50km away from the Indian settlements of Cateté and Djudjêkô and that they are both located outside the Xikrin reservation. Vale also added that it was not aware of the details of the investigation that is underway.

The power line investigation centres around claims that, in building a power line for the Salobo copper mine, Vale failed to replant damaged parts of the forest. The firm told Reuters that it had permission to suppress vegetation from the regulator that had legal powers in the region. Vale is currently expanding the production capacity at the Salobo mine, from 100,000 tonnes of copper concentrate per year, to 200,000.

The firm is also under investigation over its alleged failure to meet obligation to two tribes affected by its Onça Puma nickel mine, which is also located in the Amazon region. Vale produced more iron ore than any other mining firm in the world and is seen as a vital producer of raw materials for the steel industry.

The steel industry in Brazil is booming at the moment, thanks to its economic growth and resulting investment in infrastructure. The fact that the country is hosting both the FIFA World Cup and the Olympics within the coming four years is also boosting the steel industry.

The steel industry has, in recent years, been encouraged to use charcoal from renewable plantations – such as those run by Greenwood Management – during the production of steel. The use of native timber in the production of charcoal was discouraged by stopping steel firms from receiving government cash if they used charcoal from the native forests. As a result, the demand for sustainably produced charcoal has increased.

With regards to the progress of the investigation into Vale’s alleged environmental breaches, no charges have yet been made. Vale, meanwhile, claims it is waiting for formal notification of the investigation and is willing to cooperate by providing any information needed.