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Canadian Industrial
Giant Prepares Invasion of Patagonia
International response required to keep aluminum smelter
and river damming project out of Chile's southern temperate
rainforest
By Gary Hughes, Native Forest Network
Dramatically distinct visions of regional and hemispheric
integration are clashing in the globally significant temperate
rainforests and wild landscapes of the Southern Andes. While
NFN's Gondwana Forest Sanctuary proposal is an international
effort for increased protections of the communities, wildlands
and temperate forests of the southern hemisphere, Canadian
mining and minerals giant NORANDA, Inc. has continued to work
with the Chilean government for the green light to go ahead
with their Alumysa project. The long-term conservation of
one of the American continents last extensive temperate coastal
rainforests and wild areas is at stake. Here in North America
citizens and organizations are responding in solidarity to
the call for international support made by a coalition of
groups in the Chilean Patagonia: STOP THE ALUMYSA PROJECT.
Alumysa is a massive aluminum smelter and hydroelectric project
in the Aisen Region of Southern Chile. The 2.7 billion dollar
investment proposal would be the largest private investment
in the history of Chile, while the scale and scope of this
industrial project is far beyond any industrial development
that has ever been initiated in Patagonia. Possibly due to
the isolated nature of Chile's Patagonia, the international
environmental community is not yet prioritizing the Alumysa
project threat to international forest, biodiversity, and
wildlands conservation. Though the Environmental Impact Study
of Alumysa was sent back to NORANDA for further revision,
there continues to be growing concern amongst the environmental
organizations in Aisen that without greater national and international
attention to Alumysa, NORANDA will be able to push forward
with this ecologically and economically unsustainable project.
With the Alumysa development NORANDA desires to import alumina
minerals from Australia, Brazil, or Jamaica for processing
in a smelter to be built near Puerto Aisen. The stated reason
that NORANDA is interested in Chile is because of the tremendous
potential for electricity generation in the water rich and
steep terrain of the remote and pristine zone where the Andes
meet the sea. The Alumysa project includes the construction
of six dams in three different watersheds close to Puerto
Aisen, which will result in the drowning of 20,000 acres of
temperate evergreen rainforest, and increased road building
and habitat fragmentation. There are also grave concerns about
water and air pollution associated with the smelter itself.
Unstated publicly by NORANDA is the attraction of cheap labor
and lax environmental regulation enforcement in Chile. Alumysa
is indicative of how the priceless natural treasures and rural
communities of this South American nation are being devoured
by the voracious appetite of the globalizing neo-liberal economy.
NORANDA is one of nine giant industrial companies that belong
to the Global Mining Initiative, a greenwashing attempt by
major mineral multi-nationals to remake their image and shake
off their predatory and environmentally destructive histories.
NORANDA has a history worth noting when considering their
desire to move into Southern Chile. From the mid-1980s until
the early 1990s NORANDA was the parent company of MacMillan-Bloedel,
a logging products company in Canada that has ravaged the
ancient forests of British Columbia. NORANDA was also part
of the ill-fated Crown Butte Mine proposal for mining gold
on the northern flank of Yellowstone National Park in Montana.
Respected mining professionals have noted that NORANDA is
notorious for not committing to the use of the latest generation
technology that is necessary for minimizing the environmental
impacts of metals industries. Such promises are a large part
of the Alumysa project, but in Aisen little confidence exists
that NORANDA will follow through on their promises, or that
the Chilean government has the strength or desire to hold
the industrial giant to their word.
The cumulative impacts of industrial development and natural
resources exploitation are rarely examined. The temperate
forests of Southern Chile and Argentina are under attack from
exotic species plantation forestry, human caused fires, unregulated
livestock grazing, the damming of rivers, and the development
of industrial mega-projects. The Gondwana Forest Sanctuary
proposal is an international response to this regional environmental
crisis. By working together to defend the southern temperate
forests of Chile from threats like Alumysa, the goal of integrated
and wholistic environmental planning in the southern hemisphere
is ever closer to being realized.
To support the people of Aisen and say NO to the Alumysa
Project calls, faxes and letters to NORANDA are urgently needed.
Contact David Kerr, President and CEO of NORANDA, Inc. at
P.O. Box 755; BCE Place; Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5J 2T3;
(416) 982-7111; or fax (416) 982-7423.
You can also help stop the Alumysa Project by sending a letter
to the president of Chile. Click
HERE for more information.
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