Skip to main content

Open pit mining ban to stay — Cimatu

MANILA, Philippines — The order banning all prospective open-pit mines in the country will still be in effect and will be discussed at the interagency Mining Industry Coordinating Council, Environment Secretary Roy Cimatu said.

"It still stays. This is a policy and we at the DENR (Department of Environment and Natural Resources) implement policies. I brought this up during the MICC meeting and we will be meeting again several weeks from now," Cimatu said on the sidelines of the memorandum of agreement signing between the DENR and the Volunteer Against Crime and Corruption on Monday.

Before she got rejected by the Commission on Appointments, former environment chief Gina Lopez for copper, gold, silver and complex ores all over the country.

Since the appointment of Cimatu, mining stakeholders have been of Lopez.

Sought for comments, the Chamber of Mines of the Philippines maintained that it understands this recent decision of Cimatu, saying the open pit ban is a serious policy decision that needs to be studied carefully, with due consideration of all impacts and the interests of all stakeholders.

"We only hope that the matter will be resolved soon to address the uncertainty currently pervading in the industry," COMP Legal and Policy Vice President Ronald Recidoro said in a text message to The STAR.

"We hope that it will be an evidence-based decision that considers current technology. Open pit mining is an accepted practice worldwide that is safer than underground mining. Open pit mines can be fully rehabilitated and transformed for other land uses," he added.

Among the biggest prospective open-pit mines are the over $2-billion Pangilinan-led Silangan mine in Surigao del Norte and the $5.9-billion Tampakan project in South Cotabato, dubbed as potentially the country's biggest foreign investment and believed to be one of the largest gold prospects in the world.

The ban came after Lopez cited several reasons for the ban including its financial and environmental liability; deprivation of economic use of the area; continuing adverse impact on the environment; and its high risk to host communities.

Open-pit is defined as an excavation or cut made on the surface of the ground for the purpose of extracting ore and which is open to the surface for the duration of the mine's life.

READ: 

The order was issued even if open pit mining is allowed under the Philippine Mining Act. The Constitution even gives the state the duty to explore, develop, and utilize the country's mineral resources.

But, open pits are said to have ended up as perpetual liabilities, causing adverse impacts to the environment, particularly due to the generation of acidic and heavy metal-laden water, erosion of mine waste dumps and vulnerability of tailings dams to geological hazards.

Records show that most of the mining disasters in the country were due to tailings spills associated with open-pit mining.

In this May 8, 2017 photo, President Rodrigo Duterte administers the oath of office for the newly appointed Environment Secretary Roy Cimatu prior to the start of the 15th Cabinet Meeting at the State Dining Room in Malacañan Palace on. Also in the photo is Special Assistant to the President Christopher Lawrence Go. Robinson Niñal/Presidential Photo © Philstar.com In this May 8, 2017 photo, President Rodrigo Duterte administers the oath of office for the newly appointed Environment Secretary Roy Cimatu prior to the start of the 15th Cabinet Meeting at the State Dining Room in Malacañan Palace on. Also in the photo is Special Assistant to the President Christopher Lawrence Go. Robinson Niñal/Presidential Photo

However, banning of the open pit method may also affect energy supply nationwide, experts said.

READ: 

Popular posts from this blog

R. Tiglao Exposed LTO Records Showing Aquino Never Bought or Sold a Porsche

Veteran columnist Rigoberto Tiglao exposed the Land Transportation Office (LTO) records of former President Benigno Aquino III showing that he never bought or sold an expensive Porsche car. The LTO records proved that the former President did not sold his Porsche 911 Carrera car which he claimed he bought for P5 million. The controversial Porsche car of the former President made headlines just months into his presidency but he explained that he bought the luxury car with the proceeds he got when he sold his BMW. Because of the furor from such display of opulence, Pres. Aquino claimed to have sold it six months later for exactly the same price. According to Tiglao during that time he asked through his column the LTO to release the car's deed of sale and registration to prove that it was not a gift from a Chinese-Filipino tycoon as rumored by some individuals critical to the President. The only possible way to discover whether the Porsche luxury was indeed sold was through ...

You can pay at a restaurant by smiling at a camera

© Provided by Engadget As easy as it is to make purchases in the era of tap-to-pay services , it's about to get easier still. Alipay (which handles purchases for Chinese shopping giant Alibaba) has launched what it says is the first payment system that uses facial recognition to complete the sale. If you visit one of KFC's KPRO restaurants in Hangzhou, China, you can pay for your panini or salad by smiling at a camera-equipped kiosk -- you need to verify the purchase on your phone, but you don't have to punch in digits or bring your phone up to an NFC reader. The system (Smile to Pay) is purportedly resistant to spoofing with photos and other tricks. It relies on both depth-sensing cameras and a "likeness detection algorithm" to make sure it's really you. Reportedly, the technology is good enough that it can accurately identify people even when they're disguising themselves through makeup or wigs. You shouldn't have to worry about someone buying ...

Tesla cloud account hacked to mine cryptocurrency

© Provided by The Hill An unidentified outside hacker infiltrated Tesla's Amazon cloud account and used its systems to quietly mine for cryptocurrencies, a cybersecurity firm announced Tuesday. The hack also potentially exposed the electric car company's data. Researchers for RedLock found that Tesla's credentials on an IT administrative console were not password protected. They made the discovery while trying to track down which organizations had left their Amazon Web Services (AWS) credentials openly exposed on the internet last month. The hackers quietly hijacked the console and began running scripts to generate virtual currency like bitcoin, the latest in a series of "cryptojacking" attacks. The researchers also found the hackers used "sophisticated evasion measures" to go undetected. A spokesperson for Tesla said the company learned about the breach in a company-sanctioned bug bounty program that pays outside hackers to discover vulnerabilitie...