Zürcher Nachrichten - Mining firms targeting Brazil indigenous lands: report

EUR -
AED 4.048046
AFN 78.249657
ALL 99.603266
AMD 426.814169
ANG 1.985697
AOA 1022.758755
ARS 1055.541774
AUD 1.653158
AWG 1.986555
AZN 1.910126
BAM 1.950448
BBD 2.224705
BDT 131.668689
BGN 1.957608
BHD 0.415383
BIF 3193.916819
BMD 1.102111
BND 1.434425
BOB 7.613762
BRL 6.222411
BSD 1.101866
BTN 92.494469
BWP 14.700128
BYN 3.60584
BYR 21601.369789
BZD 2.220925
CAD 1.496082
CDF 3163.057796
CHF 0.937014
CLF 0.037826
CLP 1043.732038
CNY 7.846808
CNH 7.853426
COP 4710.961181
CRC 570.928139
CUC 1.102111
CUP 29.205934
CVE 110.752134
CZK 25.096119
DJF 195.866664
DKK 7.462504
DOP 66.126797
DZD 146.080242
EGP 53.30546
ERN 16.531661
ETB 121.009767
FJD 2.450267
FKP 0.858016
GBP 0.844669
GEL 2.970225
GGP 0.858016
GHS 17.269899
GIP 0.858016
GMD 78.249898
GNF 9533.257671
GTQ 8.517627
GYD 230.507009
HKD 8.595307
HNL 27.387108
HRK 7.569394
HTG 145.220184
HUF 396.097501
IDR 16998.900386
ILS 4.161596
IMP 0.858016
INR 92.555582
IQD 1443.765022
IRR 46404.370976
ISK 152.30092
JEP 0.858016
JMD 172.666188
JOD 0.781066
JPY 156.646285
KES 142.17191
KGS 92.79681
KHR 4485.590315
KMF 492.588179
KPW 991.899545
KRW 1476.486375
KWD 0.336772
KYD 0.918151
KZT 526.401176
LAK 24392.464807
LBP 98749.11928
LKR 331.235049
LRD 214.911326
LSL 19.72829
LTL 3.254246
LVL 0.666655
LYD 5.24647
MAD 10.781674
MDL 19.21566
MGA 4998.072466
MKD 61.548722
MMK 3579.612574
MNT 3744.971517
MOP 8.849694
MRU 43.759283
MUR 50.752792
MVR 16.928227
MWK 1912.698958
MXN 21.801816
MYR 4.771039
MZN 70.369635
NAD 19.727921
NGN 1823.992846
NIO 40.522627
NOK 11.967743
NPR 147.989532
NZD 1.797328
OMR 0.424255
PAB 1.101836
PEN 4.211713
PGK 4.310906
PHP 61.745769
PKR 307.272317
PLN 4.289103
PYG 8513.637769
QAR 4.012236
RON 4.975586
RSD 117.022213
RUB 100.926275
RWF 1476.828343
SAR 4.13608
SBD 9.185691
SCR 15.634543
SDG 662.925181
SEK 11.429004
SGD 1.436557
SHP 0.858016
SLE 25.180257
SLL 23110.675351
SOS 629.305435
SRD 32.254404
STD 22811.466411
SVC 9.641543
SYP 2769.08642
SZL 19.761165
THB 37.196185
TJS 11.742345
TMT 3.857387
TND 3.365293
TOP 2.594644
TRY 37.46725
TTD 7.466241
TWD 35.446096
TZS 2997.741211
UAH 45.483389
UGX 4098.326163
USD 1.102111
UYU 44.517839
UZS 14002.316214
VEF 3992453.922354
VES 40.327416
VND 27073.349433
VUV 130.844763
WST 3.086927
XAF 654.138241
XAG 0.038487
XAU 0.000438
XCD 2.978509
XDR 0.816644
XOF 654.104318
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.91283
ZAR 19.72172
ZMK 9920.320356
ZMW 29.114785
ZWL 354.879197
  • NGG

    0.1800

    69.32

    +0.26%

  • SCS

    0.1600

    13.34

    +1.2%

  • GSK

    -0.3300

    43.77

    -0.75%

  • RIO

    1.4400

    61.21

    +2.35%

  • BTI

    -0.1000

    39.12

    -0.26%

  • BP

    0.1400

    31.29

    +0.45%

  • CMSC

    -0.1100

    25.24

    -0.44%

  • RYCEF

    0.1200

    6.3

    +1.9%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    35.19

    -0.31%

  • RBGPF

    1.6100

    58.61

    +2.75%

  • AZN

    -0.6300

    80.53

    -0.78%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.18

    +0.3%

  • CMSD

    -0.1300

    25.13

    -0.52%

  • BCC

    0.3900

    122.09

    +0.32%

  • RELX

    -0.0800

    47.15

    -0.17%

  • VOD

    0.2000

    10.04

    +1.99%

Mining firms targeting Brazil indigenous lands: report
Mining firms targeting Brazil indigenous lands: report

Mining firms targeting Brazil indigenous lands: report

Major mining companies are seeking to expand to currently protected indigenous lands in the Amazon rainforest, bolstered by billions of dollars in financing from international banks and investment firms, a report found Tuesday.

Text size:

Nine mining giants including Brazil's Vale, Britain's Anglo American and Canada's Belo Sun have filed applications seeking authorization to mine on indigenous reservations in Brazil -- even though that is currently illegal, said the report by the environmental group Amazon Watch and the Association of Brazil's Indigenous Peoples (APIB).

The firms appear to be betting Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who has pushed to open protected lands to mining and agribusiness, will succeed in passing legislation introduced by his government that would allow them to operate on indigenous territories, it said.

As of November, the companies had a total of 225 active mining applications to Brazil's National Mining Agency (ANM) that overlap 34 indigenous lands, for a total area more than three times the size of London, it said.

"The environmental damages and threats against the lives of forest peoples by mining activities are brutal and have only worsened under Bolsonaro's administration," Ana Paula Vargas, Brazil program director at Amazon Watch, said in a statement.

"With the rainforest at the tipping point of ecological collapse, we need to involve all the actors behind this industry."

Experts say preserving indigenous lands is among the best ways to protect the world's biggest rainforest, a vital resource in the race to curb climate change.

- Alleged violations -

The report found the mining firms, which also included Glencore, AngloGold Ashanti, Rio Tinto, Potassio do Brasil and Grupo Minsur, received a total of $54.1 billion in financing from international investors over the past five years for their Brazilian operations.

It urged banks and financial firms backing such companies to pull out of them, saying many also had a history of human rights violations and environmental destruction.

Major backers of the nine mining companies include US firms BlackRock, Capital Group and Vanguard, which invested $14.8 billion in them over the past five years, it said.

Banks including France's Credit Agricole, US-based Bank of America and Citigroup and Germany's Commerzbank are also major financiers of the companies, with a total of $2.7 billion in loans and underwriting, it said.

Many of the companies denied the report's findings.

Anglo American said it had "legacy tenure applications" for indigenous lands that it had "fully and formally withdrawn several years ago."

Vale said it had done the same last year.

Belo Sun, Peru's Minsur and Potassio do Brasil said they had no activity relating to indigenous territory, and defended their social and environmental records.

A spokesperson for Vanguard meanwhile said the firm "regularly engages with mining companies" to promote sound environmental and social practices.

And Credit Agricole said it financed no mines in the Amazon.

"We have contacted Anglo American and Vale, which both confirmed they had no exploration permits for indigenous lands," it said.

I.Widmer--NZN