bocoran dari "a person close to Newmont".... 


--- In [EMAIL PROTECTED], Estee-FoE
Indonesia-WALHI 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Mining Giant Told It Put Toxic Vapors Into Indonesia's
Air
By JANE PERLEZ

Published: December 22, 2004
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/22/international/asia/22newmont.html?
hp&ex=1103691600&en=b84cd4656c8d8e28&ei=5094&partner=homepage


JAKARTA, Indonesia - An internal company report warned
top executives 
at 
the Newmont Mining Corporation, the world's largest
gold producer, in 
2001 
that the company was putting tons of toxic mercury
vapors into the 
air in 
Indonesia.

The document, shown to The New York Times by a person
close to 
Newmont, 
sheds new light on operations at one of the most
troubled mines of a 
Fortune 500 company based in Denver that has drawn the
rising ire of 
environmental groups and local communities over the
impact of its 
operations.

The report adds fuel to charges from Indonesian
officials who say 
they 
intend to prosecute the company for pollution, as well
as accusations 
by 
former employees that Newmont willfully flouted
environmental 
safeguards 
around the globe.

In its public statements, Newmont consistently says
that it regards 
American environmental standards as its measure
overseas. In a 90-
minute 
interview this month at Newmont headquarters, two top
executives 
denied 
that the company acted outside American or Indonesian
law and that 
its 
operations or the mercury harmed local people.

In a 2001 company memorandum, also seen by The Times,
Lawrence T. 
Kurlander, then a senior vice president and chief
administrative 
officer, 
admonished his senior colleagues that Newmont had
"told the world" it 
upheld American environmental rules abroad, but that
in fact it did 
not.

He suggested that because of the failure to live up to
Newmont's 
advertised 
standards, he and his colleagues should forfeit their
annual bonuses. 
The 
concern, he said, extended to operations in Peru and
Uzbekistan, as 
well as 
Indonesia.

Villagers at Buyat Bay, near the Newmont mine on the
northern island 
of 
Sulawesi, sued the company for $543 million in August
after 
complaining 
about dizziness, difficult breathing, tumors and skin
diseases, which 
they 
say began soon after Newmont started mining in 1996.

Experts consulted on the emissions said they probably
posed greater 
risk to 
the mine's workers than to the villagers, but agreed
that airborne 
mercury 
was the mining by-product's most toxic form.

Glenn Miller, a professor of environmental science at
the University 
of 
Nevada and a specialist in mining and mercury,
described the totals 
as "an 
outrageous amount of mercury to put into the
atmosphere."

The report examined by The Times says that some 33
tons of mercury 
that 
Indonesian officials say should have been collected
and sent to a 
legal 
dump for toxic waste were put into the environment
over four years. 
About 
17 tons were sent into the air and 16 more tons
released into the 
bay, the 
audit says.

In the interview, the Newmont executives defended the
company's 
operations 
but did not dispute the mercury totals and
acknowledged that they 
were 
aware of the emissions even before the findings of
what they called a 
draft 
report.

"Today I don't think it is under dispute - that 16 and
17," David H. 
Francisco, executive vice president for operations,
said of the 
totals. "Is 
there an impact, is it harmful, is it within the
accepted limits we 
have as 
an industry, that governments have established? Yeah,
I think there 
was an 
impact. On the other hand, no, it didn't negatively
impact on the bay 
and 
the people."

The Indonesian minister of the environment, Rachmat
Witolear, said 
that 
"Newmont was breaking the law" in Indonesia because it
lacked a 
permit, 
required under a 1997 statute, to put toxic material
into the 
environment. 
Newmont maintains that it had the permits it needed,
but it did not 
share 
the audit's findings with the government.

The Newmont audit itself classifies the finding on
mercury as 
"significant," meaning that it could pose an "imminent
risk" to human 
health and the environment or result in a violation
that could cause 
a 
plant closure or loss of permits.

The Newmont executives said those warnings were about
"potential 
issues." 
But the emissions were enough of a real concern that
the company went 
to 
the trouble of installing a bulky, nearly $10 million
pollution-
control 
device known as a scrubber. As Newmont sought to
"optimize gold 
recovery," 
the audit said, the device did not work much of the
time it was 
supposed to.

The audit says the company also issued its workers
badges designed to 
detect potentially dangerous levels of mercury in the
air. But those 
did 
not work either, the document says.

The report was part of a round of audits initiated by
the company to 
assess 
global operations after a subcontractor spilled some
330 pounds of 
mercury 
in 2000 along a road near a mine in Peru. Hundreds of
villagers say 
they 
were made sick by the spill in a lawsuit filed against
Newmont.

The audit of the Peru mine, Yanacocha, also criticized
a range of 
operations and cited violations that were subject to
substantial 
fines, two 
former employees familiar with the audits said. The
company was 
forced to 
call off plans to expand operations in Peru in
November after local 
people 
angrily protested.

In his memorandum dated Jan. 18, 2001, to Wayne W.
Murdy, who had 
just been 
appointed Newmont's chief executive, Mr. Kurlander
wrote of the Peru 
mine 
that in December 2000 "we, the senior management team,
learned for 
the 
first time we do not operate environmentally by U.S.
standards."

"Our environment teams are not the ministers of good
news," the 
letter 
scolded, "they are the guardians of our most treasured
asset: our 
reputation." Mr. Kurlander, who left the company in
2002, continued, 
"Moreover, there is concern we are not operating at
U.S. standards" 
in 
Uzbekistan and Indonesia.

Mr. Murdy said in an e-mail to The Times that he did
"not have a 
specific 
recollection" of the memo, but that the issues
described were being 
discussed by senior management at the time. Bonuses,
he said, saw a 
"significant deduction" after the Peru spill.

Newmont has become the gold industry's leader since
the 1990's by 
rapidly 
expanding on five continents. Under increased scrutiny
since the 
controversy at Buyat Bay, the company has defended
methods that it 
says are 
common practice but that critics say have escaped
rigorous 
regulation, even 
in the United States.

Applying Standards

In defending the Indonesian operations, David A.
Baker, vice 
president for 
environmental affairs who was interviewed with Mr.
Francisco, said 
Newmont 
applied the same standards on mercury emissions here
that it would in 
Nevada.

"Those emissions were within the limits that were
identified in the 
Indonesian permitting process and were well within any
standard or 
requirement," Mr. Baker said.

Nevada, the center of American gold mining, has more
mercury 
emissions than 
any other state and also the most relaxed standards
for mercury in 
the 
country, said Professor Miller, the mercury
specialist. In a lawsuit 
against the company, two former employees who were
dismissed by 
Newmont 
leveled similar accusations of disregard for
environmental rules at 
operations in Nevada in 2001.

Neither the state nor the Environmental Protection
Agency regulates 
mercury 
emissions at Nevada mines, except as water pollutants,
Professor 
Miller 
said. Newmont's Indonesia mine averaged more than four
tons of 
mercury in 
the air annually, about equal to the largest similar
emission at an 
American mine in Nevada in the late 1990's, he said.

But one former Newmont employee familiar with the
Indonesian mine's 
operations said that in 1998, when the mine was at the
height of 
production 
and the mercury scrubber was often not working, the
emissions into 
the air 
could have been as much as eight tons or more.

Since 2001, Professor Miller said, the E.P.A. has cut
emissions at 
Nevada 
mines by 40 percent, but he noted that it had done so
by relying on 
voluntary agreements. "Newmont is a good actor in
Nevada on mercury," 
he 
said. "What they have done in Nevada and what they
have done in 
Indonesia 
is a world apart."

An American toxicologist, Joe Rodricks, whom Newmont
recommended as a 
mercury specialist, said he had been told by the
company that when 
the 
scrubber was in operation, emissions at the Indonesian
mine met the 
standards for airborne mercury in Nevada.

"My understanding is that the times when they didn't
meet the 
standards was 
when the scrubber was not working," he said. But he
said he did not 
think 
the airborne mercury would have harmed local people.

An E.P.A. official who specializes in mercury and who
spoke on the 
condition of anonymity said that if as much as 17 tons
of mercury was 
put 
in the air over four years by a mine in the United
States, the agency 
would 
investigate to see what the health effects had been.


The hazards of mercury, which are drawing increasing
attention in the 
United States, can range from neurological damage and
learning 
disabilities 
to skin irritations, and are particularly threatening
to children and 
fetal 
development.

Indonesian officials said they decided to prosecute
Newmont based on 
the 
findings of a recent government-sponsored study. It
found significant 
levels of mercury and arsenic in the sediment and
bottom-feeding 
organisms 
at Buyat Bay, indicating that the pollutants had
entered the food 
chain as 
Newmont deposited some five million tons of mine waste
about a half 
mile 
off shore over the life of the mine.

The villagers at Buyat Bay filed their lawsuit after
the death of a 
baby 
born with what they described as "deformities."

No autopsy was done on the child, and the cause of the
villagers' 
ailments 
has not been definitively determined. Newmont
vigorously contests the 
way 
the samples were analyzed for the government study and
says the 
disposal 
system it used met American standards. An E.P.A.
official said that 
system 
was effectively banned in the United States.

Charges and Defenses

Since the controversy at the bay, the company has been
on the 
defensive. 
The Denver Post, one of Newmont's hometown newspapers,
devoted two 
days of 
coverage this month to what it said were "significant
environmental 
failures at Newmont's mines across the globe,"
including mercury 
emissions 
in Indonesia and other breaches in Nevada, Peru and
Turkey.

After an initial article on the dispute at Buyat Bay
appeared in The 
New 
York Times in September, Mr. Murdy, the chief
executive, called the 
allegations of pollution "a blatant lie." This month,
he flew to 
Indonesia 
but failed to stave off the criminal charges, which
involve senior 
employees.

Mr. Witolear, the environment minister, said the
police and the 
prosecutor's office were finalizing the case. It is
expected to go to 
court 
early next year, he said.

Regarding Indonesia, Mr. Francisco, the executive vice
president for 
operations, described the decision to install a
mercury scrubber 
as "an 
example of Newmont trying to do the right thing."

But, the audit said, in 1997 the company processed ore
with high 
mercury 
content by "roasting" it at high temperatures on 84
days before the 
scrubber arrived. After it arrived, the audit said,
the scrubber did 
not 
function on 213 of 310 days in 1998.

A major reason for the breakdown, according to the
audit, was that 
the mine 
operators had increased the heat during the roasting
in order to 
maximize 
the recovery of gold.

"The mercury scrubber facility does not have the
physical ability to 
handle 
the entire volume of gases now emitted from the
roaster," the Newmont 
document warned. Pictures with the audit showed
filters from the 
device 
torn out of the machine and strewn on the ground.

Mr. Baker said that the scrubber was operated at the
designed 
temperature, 
but had been clogged by dust. The company responded to
the audit, he 
said, 
by fixing the scrubber in mid-2001. That was just
weeks before 
Newmont 
finished mining.

He declined to say who had made the decision to
continue operations 
while 
the scrubber was not working. "I'm just going to
answer it like 
this," he 
said, "What we've done at that site was protective of
human health 
and the 
environment."

Assessing the Costs

Two former employees said the decision was made at
Denver 
headquarters to 
cut costs and maximize gold retrieval at a time when
Newmont was 
saddled 
with debt and gold prices had reached a nearly 20-year

low. "Decisions come 
downwards," said one former executive who was
intimately familiar 
with 
operations at the site. "It's always about cost."

Ellen Silbergeld, a professor at Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of 
Public 
Health, and who is directing a mercury study in Latin
America, said 
airborne mercury was particularly dangerous in
tropical climates, 
like that 
in Indonesia, because it changes more quickly into a
form that can 
enter 
the food chain.

"All forms of mercury are toxic, and mercury vapors
are extremely 
toxic," 
she said.

Newmont executives emphasize that recent tests
overseen by the World 
Health 
Organization show the villagers do not have Minamata
disease, an 
acute form 
of methylmercury poisoning named for the fishing
village in Japan 
that 
suffered one of history's most prominent industrial
disasters from 
mercury 
waste.

But Professor Silbergeld noted: "The criteria for
mercury poisoning 
is not 
Minamata disease. That's like saying the criteria for
heart disease 
is death."

The specialist from the Minamata Institute, Mineshi
Sakamoto, who 
conducted 
the tests for the W.H.O., said that while he did not
find Minamata 
disease, 
he was convinced that the bay was polluted from the
mine waste. 
Newmont 
finished operations in August.

"The environment is completely destroyed, and the
people became 
sick," Mr. 
Sakamoto said. "But it is very difficult to know the
cause of the 
sicknesses."



                
__________________________________ 
Do you Yahoo!? 
Yahoo! Mail - now with 250MB free storage. Learn more.
http://info.mail.yahoo.com/mail_250


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
$4.98 domain names from Yahoo!. Register anything.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/Q7_YsB/neXJAA/yQLSAA/BRUplB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

***************************************************************************
Berdikusi dg Santun & Elegan, dg Semangat Persahabatan. Menuju Indonesia yg 
Lebih Baik, in Commonality & Shared Destiny. www.ppi-india.uni.cc
***************************************************************************
__________________________________________________________________________
Mohon Perhatian:

1. Harap tdk. memposting/reply yg menyinggung SARA (kecuali sbg otokritik)
2. Pesan yg akan direply harap dihapus, kecuali yg akan dikomentari.
3. Lihat arsip sebelumnya, www.ppi-india.da.ru; 
4. Posting: [email protected]
5. Satu email perhari: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
6. No-email/web only: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
7. kembali menerima email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ppiindia/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Kirim email ke