Glencore’s Australia mine expansion threatens sacred sites
Expansion at an Australian lead and zinc mine run by miner Glencore puts at risk several sacred Aboriginal sites including a historical quarry, the head of a Northern Territory oversight authority told an Australian inquiry on Tuesday.
Glencore unit McArthur River Mine (MRM) received approval
from the territory’s mining minister last year to proceed with expansion at the
mine, 670 km (420 miles) southeast of Darwin, including doubling the size of
its waste dump.
The approval came despite an objection by an authority
responsible for protecting traditional sites, and amid greater scrutiny of
miners’ dealings with Indigenous groups after Rio Tinto destroyed ancient
rockshelters in Western Australia for an iron ore mine expansion last year.
“The scale of the mine expansion raises some quite serious
questions about the maintenance and protection of sacred sites on that lease
and also access to those places for custodians into the future,” said Benedict
Scambary, chief executive of the Aboriginal Areas Protection Authority (AAPA).
Glencore has applied to almost double the height of its
waste rock dump to 140 m (150 yards) from 80 m and approval now rests with the
Northern Territory mining minister. It is currently mining without exceeding
the height restrictions.
Glencore said in a statement to Reuters that it operated
under stringent conditions set down by territory and federal legislation, as
well as by AAPA conditions.
“We understand our obligation to protect sacred sites on our
mining lease and take this obligation very seriously,” Glencore said, adding
that it would seek approvals from AAPA for any future mining plans that
required them.
Scambary told the parliamentary inquiry into Rio Tinto’s
destruction of rockshelters last year that the MRM waste dump expansion could
impact adjacent sacred sites, and that Glencore did not have proper authority
from appropriate elders to do so.
Sites at risk included one related to creation stories,
known as barramundi dreaming, as well as a quarry where stone tools were made,
Scambary said.
MRM produced around 600,000 tonnes of zinc in concentrate,
and 210,000 of lead in concentrate in 2019, according to Glencore’s most recent
annual report.
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