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Venezuela bans gold-mining in forest reserve, will not issue new open-pit permits
mongabay.com
May 21, 2008




Venezuela banned gold mining in its Imataca Forest Reserve and said it will not issue new permits for open-pit mines anywhere in the country, according to Reuters.

"Venezuela will deny environmental permits for the open-pit mine exploitation," Environment Minister Yuviri Ortega told Reuters in an interview last week. "Neither private or public companies will for now explore Imataca's gold."

"For the moment we do not need to exploit these minerals; as the president says, we don't need diamonds or gold, or coal," she said.


Miners in the Caroni river basin
Venezuela has seen a financial windfall from record-high oil prices despite stagnating production. The funds have apparently reduced the impetus to exploit the country's rich mineral deposits.

Scientists have warned that open-pit mining — often conducted by "irregular" miners — is causing ecological harm to biologically-rich forests in Venezuela.

Southern Venezuela contains part of the Guiana shield, a region characterized by exposed rock dating back to the Precambrian period some 600 million years ago. This geology, like that of parts of West Africa, Western Australia, and the Brazilian Shield, produces rich deposits of gold, diamonds, iron ore, and bauxite.

Related

Mining in Venezuelan Amazon threatens biodiversity, indigenous groups November 9, 2006
Troubles are mounting in one of Earth's most beautiful landscapes. Deep in the Venezuelan Amazon, among ancient forested tabletop mountains known as tepuis, crystalline rivers, and breathtaking waterfalls, illegal gold miners are threatening one of world's largest remaining blocks of wilderness, one that is home to indigenous people and strikingly high levels of biological diversity. As the situation worsens -- a series of attacks have counted both miners and indigenous people as victims -- a leading scientific organization has called for the Venezuelan government to take action.







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