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Environment, Oil Mining Resources

GINA RINEHART’S MINING COMPANY TO LOSE MINING CONCESSIONS IN ECUADOR AFTER REFERENDUM RESULTS

Friends of the Earth Australia/Rainforest Action Group 3 mins read

GINA RINEHART’S COMPANY TO LOSE MINING CONCESSIONS IN ECUADOR AFTER REFERENDUM RESULTS

 

RAINFOREST ACTION GROUP/FRIENDS of the EARTH MEDIA RELEASE, 25 August 2023 

 

Ecuadorians voted to protect unique biospheres and halt mineral and oil extraction in two national referendums last week – one annulling mining concessions owned by Gina Rinehart and others in northwest Ecuador.

 

Two referendums aiming to protect unique biosphere reserves in Ecuador were passed last week,” says Liz Downes, a member of the Rainforest Action Group and Director of the Rainforest Information Centre. ‘The move is a huge win for the protection of these irreplaceable areas.”

 

“In one referendum, seventy-six percent of citizens were in favour of halting gold mining projects near Ecuador’s capital Quito, in the Chocó Andino Biosphere Reserve, designated by UNESCO in 2019” Ms Downes added.

 

The UNESCO reserve sits in a tract of mega-biodiverse cloud forest which once extended through northwestern Ecuador and southern Colombia. It is estimated that 3-6% of the original forest remains. Other nearby tracts include the Cotacachi-Cayapas National Park and Los Cedros Reserve - which was protected from mining by a historic Constitutional Court decision in 2021, defending the rights of nature.

 

Seventeen metals mining concessions are affected by this referendum victory,” says Peter Shear, director of local environmental and human rights organisation APT-Norte. “Six of these do not have existing environmental licenses, and have now been completely annulled - including two gold concessions owned by Hanrine (Gina Rinehart), Lorena02 and Lorena03.”

 

Hanrine, a 100% owned subsidiary of Hancock Prospecting, has alarmed human rights groups since 2019 for its violent repressions towards citizens of Buenos Aires, a town sitting within the company’s Imba 2 mining concession, north of the Chocó Andino region.

 

“Hanrine has had a very difficult time since entering Ecuador over 5 years ago” said Friends of the Earth spokesperson Anthony Amis. “Community groups are still in shock about what has occurred in the Imba mining concessions after violence and excessive Government force. The north of Ecuador is an extremely risky proposition for mining companies such as Hanrine, BHP and Solgold” he added.

 

The referendum results specifically prohibit the exploitation of metals, which means that the remaining 11 concessions that already have their titles can still apply for exploration permits and the associated environmental licenses but cannot then establish mines or tunnels” says Peter Shear.

 

It is now up to the Ministry of Environment and Energy Transition (MAATE) to make sure companies do not try to continue to illegally explore or exploit minerals at the siteshowever we know the ministry is pro-mining, and we may have to resort to international arbitration to ensure the referendum result is upheld by law,” Peter says.

 

In the other referendum, over sixty percent of Ecuadorian citizens voted in favour of stopping the drilling of new oil wells in the Yasuní national park in the Amazon – one of the most biodiverse regions on the planet, and home to numerous Indigenous peoples, including two of the world’s last “uncontacted” communities.

 

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:

Peter Shear, [email protected]  +593 986 849 950

Liz Downes, [email protected] +61 415 308 041

 

Image below shows affected mining concessions in the Chocó Andino reserve and nearby areas, noting those owned by Hanrine.

 


Contact details:

Peter Shear, [email protected]  +593 986 849 950

Liz Downes, [email protected] +61 415 308 041

 

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