The day I visited
the Peruvian mountain village of La Oroya, I watched Mayor Clemente Quincho
lead a noisy demonstration involving thousands of marchers. Their loud slogans
and emotional chants would remind anyone of the protests that have long characterized
environmental and civil rights activism. In many ways, that’s exactly what
this was.
But this wasn’t your ordinary demonstration. These vocal townsfolk were demonstrating in favor
of the continued operation of an 80-year-old copper and lead smelter -- both
because it’s the lifeblood of the town and because they support the company,
Doe Run Peru, in its efforts to improve social and environmental conditions
in the region.
Unfortunately
for the people of La Oroya, this doesn’t sit well with international advocacy
groups like Oxfam, Christian Aid and Friends of the Earth -- who have made
Doe Run one of the latest targets in their ongoing anti-corporation, anti-development
campaigns. These campaigns ignore the wishes of people in developing-world
communities that the international groups profess to defend.
As I’ve
seen in so many other parts of the world and in so many other industries
-- Indonesia’s pulp and paper industry being just one good example -- it’s
often not really about making the world a better place; it’s about money
and power for these groups.
Let’s
look at how this is playing out in Peru. La Oroya sits in a steep mountain
valley, 12,400 feet up in the Andes northeast of Lima, where there are few
resources other than minerals on which to base an economy. Its huge smelter
has operated for eight decades. As is typical of metallurgical operations,
emissions from the plant have historically created health and environmental
challenges for the community. Indeed, things got so bad in the years before
Doe Run Peru came to town in 1997 that one observer interviewed by Newsweek described conditions there as “a vision from hell.”
Since
Doe Run’s arrival, however, things have been steadily improving. Lead levels
in the blood of workers are down more than 30 percent, air lead emissions
are down more than 35 percent, and discharges into local rivers have decreased
significantly. In addition, industrial safety has improved dramatically at
the smelter, which has gone more than a full year without a single lost-time
accident.
While
the NGOs have been squawking, Doe Run has put its nose to the grindstone,
working with the townspeople to improve conditions there. Since purchasing
the operation from Peru’s government, Doe Run has spent $140 million. It’s
in the process of spending more than $150 million more on improvements to
help reduce plant emissions and provide more and better services to the community.
Responsible
environmentalism abounds here. Initially focusing on reducing emissions like
cadmium and sulfur, as required by its purchase agreement with the government,
Doe Run Peru soon found through its on-site assessments that other areas
of concern, such as air lead emissions, presented a more significant health
risk to the locals.
This
kind of science-based reassessment of priorities, with its inherent costs
to the company, is representative of the responsible role Doe Run Peru has
taken as part of the La Oroya community. Last year, with strong support from
local people and labor unions, the government of Peru agreed and allowed
Doe Run Peru to apply to amend its environmental operating agreement to reflect
these new priorities.
While
the company’s progress on lead-level reductions in La Oroya has been considerable,
reducing sulfur emissions will require more work. Previous smelter operators
never addressed this issue at all, and there simply hasn’t been enough time
to complete the massive sulfur extraction plant that will bring stack emissions
down to acceptable levels. But the company has pledged to continue working
toward this goal.
Investment
in pollution controls isn’t the only reason the La Oroya townsfolk support
Doe Run Peru, however. The company also provides funds for healthcare, education
and hot lunch programs for local children.
It has
carried out the first-ever community-wide blood-level surveys, using Centers
for Disease Control protocols, and has installed water-collection systems
to treat sewage and stormwater. It’s also supported vocational training for
some 8,000 women, resulting in dozens of new businesses, planted thousands
of cypress trees along village streets, and is helping local dairy farmers
to increase productivity.
But the
NGOs continually cry foul, which leads me to wonder: If La Oroya is really
the disaster that the NGOs say it is, why did they show no interest in it
until only a few years ago -- well after Doe Run Peru came to town -- and
not during the previous 75 years of operation?
I spoke
directly to Mayor Quincho, and to local doctors, foresters, farmers and social
workers. All felt the company was doing its best to improve social, economic
and environmental conditions in the region. All of this stands in stark contrast
to Christian Aid, Oxfam and the others -- who have done nothing that even
remotely approaches the kind of tangible progress that is making a real difference
in the lives of La Oroya’s people.
I’ve
been fortunate to have traveled throughout the world, and to have seen the
sustainable development debate from many sides. Doe Run Peru is a good, responsible
citizen of the La Oroya community. The international community at large --
and especially the NGOs involved in Peru -- should heed the chants of the
thousands of demonstrators who see Doe Run Peru as an important part of their
sustainable future.
Let Doe
Run Peru and the people of La Oroya continue to work together for a brighter
future -- without self-interested NGO interference.
Co-founder of Greenpeace, Dr. Patrick Moore is Chair and Chief Scientist of Greenspirit Strategies Ltd.
in Vancouver, Canada: Dr. Moore was invited by The Doe Run Company to visit
their facilities and assess the progress of their sustainable development
efforts.
Email Dr. Moore
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