TED Case Studies

Venezuelan Gold Mining

CASE NUMBER: 358

CASE MNEMONIC: VENGOLD

CASE NAME: Venezuela Gold Mine

I. Identification

1. The Issue

Gold miners in Venezuela are wreaking havoc on the Amazon rain forest, and its inhabitants, because of their destructive mining techniques. These miners are the same ones who were expelled for damaging the Amazon and the Yanomami Indian reservations in the Brazilian state of Roraima in 1990. The central government has been debating methods of enforcing tougher border controls, as well as tougher statutes on the export of gold from Venezuela, however, at present, the state is powerless to intervene.

2. Description

Upon their expulsion from Roraima State in Brazil in 1990, tens of thousands of gold miners, known as garimpeiros, have descended upon the remote Venezuelan state of Amazonas to continue their destructive mining techniques. As most of Venezuela's proven gold reserves lie near the surface, its extraction is easy and profitable for large scale mining operations. These garimpeiros utilize high power water cannons, connected to nearby rivers, to blast away vast amounts of soil and vegetation. As the soil in the Amazon rain forest is of poor quality, and fragile, the deforestation caused by the miners is, in essence, irreversible. The removed soil is carried away, leaving open pits which are filled with water. The resulting mud holes are a breeding ground for malaria-carrying mosquitoes. Also, the soil which is removed causes increased sedimentary silt build ups which clog the turbines at the Guri Dam on the Caroni River, the nation's main source of hydroelectric power. This has caused the abandonment of plans to further expand the facility. In addition, mercury has been extensively utilized as it aids in the gold amalgamation process. This mercury has turned up in unsafe quantities in the livers of widely-consumed fish, as well as at popular beaches and in the water taps of local residents. An additional difficulty for the Venezuelan government is that once the gold has been mined, it is extremely difficult to track. This is due in large part because the gold is removed from the country somewhere along the country's forested border with her neighbors. The government has placed control over the mining operations on the back shelf, as it has been confronted by a series of economic and banking crises since the beginning of 1995. Therefore, it is highly unlikely that any effective government response to the problem will occur at any time in the foreseeable future.

3. Related Cases

BRAGOLD case
BOLGOLD case
BEN case
BRAZIL case
PERUMINE case
ECUADOR case
PAPUA case
YELLOW case

4. Draft Author:

Brian Schwab (June, 1995)

II. Legal Clusters

5. Discourse and Status:

DISagree and Allegation

6. Forum and Scope:

Venezuela and Unilateral Venezuelan National Legislature (no legislation pending due to political confusion over recurring economic crises in the country, (however debates are continuing).

7. Decision Breadth:

1

8. Legal Standing:

LAW It is as yet uncertain whether Venezuela's oft deadlocked political system will be able to reach a consensus decision on this issue with all other ongoing difficulties it is presently encountering (such as the current economy and banking crisis).

III. Geographic Clusters

9. Geographic Locations

a. Geographic Domain: South America

b. Geographic Site: Northern South America

c. Geographic Impact: Venezuela

10. Sub-National Factors:

Yes

11. Type of Habitat:

Tropical

IV. Trade Clusters

12. Type of Measure:

Regulatory Standard

13. Direct v. Indirect Impacts:

Indirect

14. Relation of Trade Measure to Environmental Impact

a. Directly Related to Product: YES GOLD

b. Indirectly Related to Product: NO

c. Not Related to Product: NO

d. Related to Process: YES Pollution Land

15. Trade Product Identification:

Gold The product is unwrought gold, either non-monetary bullion or other tradeable forms, and is in the raw, intermediate and final stages of production.

16. Economic Data

Unofficially, about $58 million in gold is mined annually in Venezuela. Unofficial revenue estimates are approximately 3 times higher.

17. Impact of Trade Restriction:

LOW

18. Industry Sector:

MINE

19. Exporters and Importers:

Venezuela and Many

The main importers in this case are mainly Venezuela's immediate Amazon neighbors: Brazil, Colombia, and Guyana. a. Leading Exporters
Union of South Africa:export revenue figures were unavailable at the time of writing. South Africa possesses roughly 2/3 of the world's known gold supply and mining is extensive. Estimates of South Africa's revenues from gold exports place the figure somewhere near $1.5 to 3 billion per year.
Brazil:91,258,390,000 grams worth $1,246,140,000.00 (mostly low grade quality) - 1989 estimate
Canada:22,395,771 grams worth $279,410,000.00
Venezuela:4,665,450 grams worth $58,050,000.00 - 1989 estimate
Colombia:1,896,895 grams worth $20,318,000.00
b.  Leading Importers
United Kingdom:108,822,793 grams worth $1,325,109,000.
Switzerland:95,019,993 grams worth $1,126,389,000.
Hong Kong:64,714,124 grams worth $794,995,000.00
Taiwan:32,453,759 grams worth $403,845,000.00
United States:27,395,046 grams worth $332,095,000.00

V. Environment Clusters

20. Environmental Problem Type:

21. Name, Type, and Diversity of Species

22. Resource Impact and Effect:

Low and Product

23. Urgency and Lifetime:

Low and 100s of years

24. Substitutes:

Synthetic Conservation as well as possible recycling efforts could be implemented as alternatives to destructive mining. In addition, mining lower grade ores from other parts of the country as well as employing environmentally safer mining methods in the Amazon could also be substitutes to destructive strip mining techniques.

VI. Other Factors

25. Culture:

Yes The indigenous native population who inhabit the affected area in Venezuela have been subjected to murderous attacks by miners, operating with at least tacit local government support. Thus, the Yanomami culture is in danger of suppression or even destruction.

26. Trans-Boundary Issues:

Yes The miners were pushed out of Brazil into Venezuela. At issue is also the porous border between Venezuela and Brazil (and Venezuela's other neighbors) in the Amazon region. Some of the more radical Venezuelan legislators have proposed militarizing the border as a means of establishing control in the region.

27. Rights:

Yes The Yanomami Indians populate the area, and have been the object of numerous attacks. The most notable of these occurred in January, 1993, when sixteen young Yanomami were slaughtered by miners, with the tacit support of the local Venezuelan government officials. Other infractions against the aboriginies include the invasion of reservation areas by garimpeiros and government officials who seek access to the gold region.

28. Relevant Literature

"Assault on the Amazon", Time, Nov 5, 1990, Vol 136, No 20, p. 100- 101.

"Amazon Gold Prospectors", National Catholic Reporter, Feb 23, 1990; Vol 26, No 18, p. 7.

"High Cost of Gold: Another Part of the (Rain) Forest", Commonweal, Nov. 8, 1991, Vol 118, No 19, p. 631-632.


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