#Illegal Mining
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"When President Lula da Silva took office this year in Brazil, many environmental and indigenous rights groups hoped he would fulfill campaign promises of better protection for the Amazon rainforest and the people who live there.
Nearly four months into his tenure and early signs are that Lula was telling the truth, as Brazilian police have evicted dozens of illegal gold miners from the Yanomami Reserve, an area the size of Portugal inhabited by around 35,000 [Indigenous people].
Illegally-mined gold accounts for around half of all the country’s exports, and a new Environment of the Amazon division of the federal police is seeking international assistance in building a first-rate structure for targeting the outside funding toward and sales from illegal gold mining.
Reuters says that so far, the new division has ousted nearly all miners from the area, including overseeing the destruction of 250 mining camps and 70 low-tech boats used for dredging. 48 planes and helicopters for smuggling the gold out of the reserve have been seized as well.
The police hope to use radioisotope technology and methods to be able to pinpoint the exact mineralogical makeup of illegally mined gold as a way of targeting it in the market even after it’s melted into ingots.
They also plan to remove miners from 6 other Amazon reserves this year, while setting up a permanent, floating police station on a river in the Yanomami Reserve.
At the moment, the Lula Administration is considering the best set of laws for tackling the problem. While 804 miners have been arrested in the raids, all were let go, and many others fled in the police advance.
Humberto Freire, from the new Amazon division, told Reuters he and his department hope to create a sophisticated electronic tax receipt for any transactions of precious metals to help pinpoint sales and distribution of suspected illegal bullion."
-via Good News Network, 3/23/23
youtube
-video via Reuters, 3/22/23
#lula da silva#amazon#amazon rainforest#rainforest#conservation#indigenous peoples#indigenous activism#illegal mining#gold mining#brazil#south america#yanomami#environmental justice#amazonia#latin america#conservation news#good news#hope#Youtube
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Sand theft
#sand theft#environmentalism#environmental health#environmental awareness#environmental science#resource depletion#natural resources#natural resource depletion#environmental destruction#environmental degradation#wikipedia#wikipedia pictures#nature#wikimedia commons#illegal mining
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Mining on Indigenous reservations in the Brazilian Amazon has increased 1,217% in the last 35 years
- By Elton Alisson , Agência FAPESP -
The last 35 years at the Brazilian Legal Amazon (an area spanning nine Brazilian states defined by federal law for environmental protection and developmental purposes) saw wildcat mining activities on Indigenous reservations expand from 7.45 square kilometers (km²) of occupied area in 1985 to 102.16 km² in 2020, a 1,217% increase.
All mining in these reservations is illegal. Wildcat prospecting in the Kayapó, Munduruku, and Yanomami reservations accounts for 95% of the total.
These are some of the key findings of a study conducted by researchers at Brazil’s National Space Research Institute (INPE) and the University of South Alabama (USA) in the United States. An article on the study is published in the journal Remote Sensing.
“We observed steady expansion of mining on Indigenous reservations between 1985 and 2020, with particularly fast growth from 2017 on. In that year, illegal mining activities occupied 35 km² of Indigenous land. By 2020, they had expanded to almost 103 km²,” Guilherme Augusto Verola Mataveli, first author of the article, told Agência FAPESP. Mataveli is currently a postdoctoral researcher in INPE’s Earth Observation and Geoinformatics Division and has a scholarship from FAPESP.
The other authors of the article include Michel Eustáquio Dantas Chaves, also a researcher at INPE, and Elton Vicente Escobar Silva, a PhD candidate at INPE.
To locate mining activities on Indigenous reservations, the researchers analyzed a dataset for the period 1985-2020 from MapBiomas, a collaborative network of NGOs, universities and tech startups that maps land use and land cover across Brazil.
MapBiomas provides annual land use and land cover maps for the entire Brazilian territory at a spatial resolution of 30 meters, based on automatic classification of Landsat images using the Random Forest machine learning algorithm.
“The system classifies images automatically and can distinguish between areas of forest with or without mining activities, especially areas where the soil is bare and the visible characteristics are quite different from areas with plant cover,” Mataveli said.
However, the system has some limitations when it comes to detecting mining activities on Indigenous reservations, such as the impossibility of classifying gold panning and similar activities carried out using equipment on boats anchored in rivers and smaller areas where the forest cover has not been cleared even though wildcat prospecting goes on there.
“The growth in mining on Indigenous reservations in the Brazilian Legal Amazon as detected by our study was alarming enough, but it was probably an underestimate given these limitations in the dataset we used,” Mataveli said.
Growing encroachment by illegal miners
The researchers found that gold is produced by 99.5% of the illegal mining operations on Indigenous reservations in the Amazon. The remaining 0.5% produces cassiterite, the ore from which tin is derived.
The growth of mining in the period was most intense on the Kayapó reservation, where it occupied an area of 77.1 km² in 2020, or almost 1,000% more than in 1985 (7.2 km²).
On the Munduruku reservation, it expanded from 4.6 km² in 2016 to 15.6 km² in 2020. On the Yanomami reservation, it expanded from 0.1 km² to 4.2 km² in the period.
“The government must intensify oversight, monitoring and law enforcement in these areas in order to halt the advance of illegal mining,” Mataveli said.
The Yanomami, living on a reservation demarcated in 1992, are the most isolated of the three communities, he added. For a long time, this isolation hindered encroachment by wildcat prospectors, but rising international gold prices and weakening protection of the Amazon in recent years have boosted investment in infrastructure for access to the area, which is protected by law. “The Yanomami reservation became the new frontier for illegal mining because of this combination of factors,” he said.
The area occupied by the activity on this reservation exceeded 2 km² for the first time in 2018, according to the study. Since then, encroachment and human rights violations have multiplied as illegal mining has advanced.
In 2022, the Federal Police (an agency of the Ministry of Justice in Brazil) observed a 505% increase in illegal mining along the Uraricoera River, a major artery for the Yanomami. Their leaders estimate that more than 20,000 wildcat prospectors have invaded the reservation. The Yanomami population is believed to total about 30,000. Malaria and other infectious diseases have spread swiftly in step with all this encroachment.
“The tragedy and humanitarian crisis we’re seeing now in the Yanomami community was perfectly predictable,” Mataveli said.
To reverse the trend, the first step should be to identify and monitor the Indigenous areas where illegal mining has increased most in recent years. It is also necessary to curb deforestation. Mining in the Amazon, including the Indigenous reservations there, occurs after the forest has been cleared, Mataveli noted.
“Illegal mining in the Amazon is very closely associated with deforestation because the forest has to be cleared before mining can begin,” he said.
The article “Mining is a growing threat within Indigenous lands of the Brazilian Amazon” is at: www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/14/16/4092.
This text was originally published by FAPESP Agency according to Creative Commons license CC-BY-NC-ND. Read the original here.
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#mining#illegal mining#brazil#amazon forest#yanomami#indigineous people#nature#biodiversity#forest#kayapó#munduruku#data science
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Police Siege on Illegal Miners in South Africa
Around the yawning entrance of a deserted mine, South African police have maintained a vigilant presence, poised to apprehend anyone attempting to emerge from the depths. This operation has been ongoing for several weeks, targeting hundreds of individuals suspected of engaging in illegal mining activities within an abandoned gold mine located near Stilfontein, in the North West Province of South…
#abandoned mine#crime#human rights#illegal mining#Khumbudzo Ntshavheni#mining industry#police operation#South Africa#Stilfontein#unemployment
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Security Agencies Clash Over Arrest Of Chinese Nationals In Illegal Mining Site In Kebbi State
The Mining Marshals, a specialised unit deployed to tackle illegal mining nationwide, were recently thwarted by security forces while attempting to arrest Chinese nationals engaging in the illegal exploitation of lithium at a site in Libata, Ngaski Local Government Area of Kebbi State. The confrontation occurred last Friday and saw the marshals clash with military personnel and policemen, who…
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Kwara Governor Decries Ilegal Mining, Urges Economic Geologist To Rescue Situation
The Kwara State governor, AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq on Monday decried the high rate of illegal mining in the country and tasked the professional economic geologist to rise to the challenge and rescue the situation. Governor Abdulrahman made the appeal at the opening ceremony of the 3rd International Conference of the Nigerian Society of Economic Geologists (NSEG), held at Al- Hikmah University’s…
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Government to Announce New Interventions in Fight Against Illegal Mining – Samuel Abu Jinapor
The Minister for Lands and Natural Resources, Samuel Abu Jinapor, has revealed that the government will soon unveil major interventions to intensify its efforts in combating illegal mining, commonly referred to as galamsey. Speaking during an interview on the Citi Breakfast Show with Bernard Avle on Tuesday, October 8, Mr. Jinapor shared that the government’s recent meeting with Organised…
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विधायक के इशारे पर खनन माफिया ने वन विश्राम गृह के पास किया अवैध खनन, वह उनके सरगना; लाल सिंह कौशल
विधायक के इशारे पर खनन माफिया ने वन विश्राम गृह के पास किया अवैध खनन, वह उनके सरगना; लाल सिंह कौशल #News #Update #Trending #Info #RightNewsIndia #RightNews
Mandi News: राज्य सहकारी बैंक के निदेशक एवं कांग्रेस पार्टी के महासचिव लाल सिंह कौशल ने नाचन के विधायक विनोद कुमार पर गंभीर आरोप लगाते हुए कहा है कि उन्होंने हमेशा दूसरों के कंधों पर बंदूक तानकर अपने पद की गरिमा को धूमिल किया है। कौशल ने पत्रकार वार्ता में कहा कि नाचन क्षेत्र में सक्रिय सभी खनन माफिया विधायक के इशारे पर खूब पैसा कमा रहे हैं और वह उनके सरगना हैं। चैलचौक वन विश्राम गृह के साथ…
#carried out#forest rest house#Illegal mining#instructions#kingpin#Lal Singh Kaushal#mining mafia#MLA
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Bawumia proposes prevention-based approach to combat galamsey if he becomes president
Accra, Sept. 17 – Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia has outlined a preventive strategy to tackle illegal mining (galamsey) in Ghana, emphasizing the need to sanitize and regulate the small-scale mining sector. Speaking on the ongoing fight against illegal mining, Dr. Bawumia highlighted the importance of empowering the Geological Survey Authority to take a central role in prospecting for…
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25 stone crushers closed in Kathua over illegal mining
JAMMU — Authorities in Jammu and Kashmir’s Kathua district closed down 25 stone crushers, in a major crackdown against illegal mining activities and unauthorised processing of mined material, an official said on Sunday. The action against the stone crushers was initiated by Kathua Deputy Commissioner Rakesh Minhas after conducting physical verification and assessing the working of such units…
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In Peru illegal mining has caused forests to be removed and mercury to seep into the ground.
Now Pure Earth a nonprofit is replanting forests one sapling at a time.
Around 50,000 miners are still operating in the forest but punishing economically impoverished miners does not work as well as giving Peruvians a chance to rebuild their own rain forest.
#amazon rainforest#gold mining#environment#deforestation#environmental restoration#illegal mining#peru
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Especially when lithium and cobalt, which are mined with literal slave labor and often with children.
"People are working in subhuman, grinding, degrading conditions. They use pickaxes, shovels, stretches of rebar to hack and scrounge at the earth in trenches and pits and tunnels to gather cobalt and feed it up the formal supply chain."
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The Evolution of China's Rare Earth Industry: From Chaos to Control
The Transformation of China’s Rare Earth Industry As recently as 2010, China’s rare earth metal production was characterized by a chaotic and often lawless environment, despite being a crucial pillar of the global economy. Transactions involving rare earth elements often took place under dubious circumstances, with payments exchanged for stacks of Chinese currency. It was reported that a cubic…
#China#consolidation#David Abraham#ecosystem#environmental impact#illegal mining#law enforcement#public health#radioactive waste#rare earth industry
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