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Destruction
and devastation under Mongolia's
eternal sky
Anyone who
visits Mongolia
in the belief that it is the last unspoilt frontier will be in for a
shock. As Brian Awehali discovered, the seemingly infinite Mongolian
sky now hangs over the largest mining boom on the planet.
AFTER spending
several months in the epic clamour of industrialising China,
I went to Mongolia
looking for open spaces and unspoiled nature, for clean air, for hiking
and horseback riding, and for nights still dark enough to terrify. In
the countryside (and most of it remains countryside) the Eternal Sky
held sacred by Mongolians since well before the time of Genghis Khan
levitates with majesty over wide-open grassland prairie, steppe, subarctic
evergreen forest, wetland, alpine tundra, mountain, and desert. It stretches
above yak, goat, reindeer, camel, wolf, bear, marmot, squirrel, hawk,
falcon, eagle and crane, and above some of the last traditional nomadic
peoples and wild horses on Earth.
The seemingly
infinite Mongolian sky also hangs over the largest mining boom on the
planet.
On my flight
from Beijing to Ulaanbaatar,
I sat next to a miner named Tim. Tim had a wife and two children back
in Nova Scotia, with another
on the way. He was trying to convince his wife to relocate to Mongolia,
but she wasn't going for it yet. So his mining career kept him away
from his family as he travelled to Colorado,
Nevada, Australia,
and now Mongolia.
Tim kept his taupe outdoorsman's hat on for the entire flight, but I
forgave him for that because he shared his Lonely Planet Mongolia and
enthusiastically told me about his work at a new copper mine in the
Gobi Desert.
'It's just
a camp now, but we're investing $40 million this year alone, and when
it really gets up and running, it'll probably become the second largest
city in Mongolia,' Tim told me. 'It's going to be huge.'
Tim was almost
certainly talking about the Oyu Tolgoi mine, or 'Turquoise Hill', a
copper and gold ore deposit in Southern Mongolia that's larger than
the state of Florida.
Oyu Tolgoi is the world's largest mining exploration project, a joint
venture between a Canadian company named Ivanhoe and the Mongolian government,
with significant financing from Chilean mining giant Rio Tinto. Together,
they plan to invest $5 billion into operations in the next few years,
making Oyu Tolgoi the largest foreign investment in Mongolian history.
Over the forecast 65-year lifespan of the mine, its revenues are expected
to become a third of Mongolia's
gross domestic product. It's a big deal, and the discovery of it and
a wealth of untapped deposits of coal, gold, silver, tin, uranium, and
'rare earth minerals' used in most of today's advanced electronics has
mining-industry shills proclaiming Mongolia the next 'Saudi Arabia of
insert-name-of-precious-metal-here'.
Despite projections
that the mining boom is expected to triple or quadruple the size of
Mongolia's economy in the next five
years, times are tough for most Mongolians, and the relationship between
the country's great natural resources and the wealth of its people is
still to be determined. The United Nations estimates that 27% of Mongolia's urban population lives
below the poverty line. In rural areas, nearly 50% of people live in
poverty. During the past decade, a series of unusually severe zuds -
storms that turn winter snow cover into solid ice, causing the mass
starvation of livestock - has had a devastating effect on a country
where a quarter of the people make their living (or attempt to make
their living) raising livestock.
And so, like
people in many other impoverished nations, Mongolians are choosing between
remaining with their traditional ways or mortgaging their natural resources.
'Living off
the cashmere is not economically sustainable. But is living off mining
sustainable?' says Onodelgerekh Ganzorig, director of the Mongol Environmental
Conservation (MEC), an Earth Island Institute-sponsored project that
works to preserve the environment and cultural heritage of the country.
'Half of Mongolians say "Yes, we want mining." But the other
half that lives off the land is saying "No, we don't support it,
because it's going to destroy this whole area and we're not going to
have grazing lands or pasture lands."'
Mongolia
today is the least densely populated country in the world, with four
people per square mile. But before I could get to the countryside, I
needed to spend several days in Ulaanbaatar ('Red Hero', UB in local slang),
the capital city. In the past decade, a combination of economic and
climatological disasters have forced many Mongolians from rural areas
to seek opportunity in UB, and the city has swelled improvidently, from
the 300,000 it was originally designed for to around a million today,
or roughly a third of the country's entire population. Except for a
mercilessly short window of summertime with snatches of clear skies
and almost hyper-real clouds, UB is dusty and void of vegetation. The
city is filled with block after block of concrete apartment buildings
with paint peeling from exposure to the extreme cold and dryness of
winter. Dust storms frequently whip through the city.
Even when
it's still the air quality is atrocious. The belching exhaust towers
of UB's two major coal power plants dominate an otherwise monolithic
concrete skyline. Around the perimeter of UB are ger (yurt) 'suburbs'
where smoking tin exhaust pipes rise from a sea of circular cloth roofs.
The city's many poor have small stoves they use constantly to cook and
keep warm with throughout the long winter in the coldest national capital
city in the world. Sometimes they burn trash - wood, furniture, tyres.
But mostly they burn the same coal as the city's power plants. Today,
a fair number of UB's residents refer to the city in winter as 'Utaanbaatar'
- 'Smog Hero'.
My UB host,
guide, and driver, Bogi ('Crystal'), grew up in a nomadic family of
herders in western Mongolia.
She is 24, and somewhat typical of her generation: She's left her family's
traditional way of life in the countryside to pursue opportunities in
the city. Bogi is lean yet wide-shouldered and has straight black shoulder-length
hair, dark eyes, and strong, high cheekbones. To keep her hands from
tanning like those of a country person, she wears lacy white-sleeved
gloves when she drives. Bogi teaches English for much of the year, but
in the summer she runs a traveller's hostel and gets up at 4:30 a.m.
to meet travellers disembarking from the Trans-Siberian railroad.
On my third
day in Mongolia, Bogi drove me out of the
city to look for a ger to rent from a nomad family somewhere in Gorkhi-Terelj,
a national park and protected area two hours northeast of UB. We bumped
over a mix of unpaved dirt and marginally more paved roads, and Bogi
assured me that finding a ger would simply be a matter of driving into
the countryside, locating a family, and negotiating room and lodging.
And she was right - more or less. Mongolians have a well-earned reputation
for being hospitable to travellers, and theirs is a land largely without
fences. It's still possible to rent or buy a horse and ride from ger
to ger across a great deal of the country. Finding lodging in traveller-oriented
Gorkhi-Terelj would be easy.
After one
unsuccessful stop, we drove up to a group of teenagers and a young man
on horseback near a large rock formation. Bogi exchanged a few words
with the man on the horse, Baul (ba-OOL), who had ruddy wind- and sun-burned
cheeks and wore a long, blue, high-collared robe tied together at the
waist by a thick yellow silk sash. He gestured for us to follow him
as he galloped his horse up the road. We drove to a farm with two livestock
pens, three gers, and a satellite dish. A bargain was soon struck with
his family for me to stay and be fed for two weeks for $17 per day.
In the car
ride out, Bogi had asked about my desire to live in a ger, and seemed
incredulous that an American would want to stay in one for two weeks.
'Mongolia,'
I said, squinting my eyes against the dust, 'is beautiful.' At this,
Bogi snorted, 'I am from the country, so it is no big deal to me.' Still,
long after the details of my stay were ironed out Bogi lingered for
several rounds of salty yak-butter tea and Mongolian fry bread. As the
circle of sky at the top of the ger grew dim, she was still there.
Bogi told
me the family is nomadic, but that they mostly stay in Gorkhi-Terelj
in summertime so they can take on visitors like me and make money. Over
the next two weeks, in the course of a horse ride, rounds of vodka,
and many heated games of chess with Baul, I learned - through sign language,
and some rudimentary shared 'Monglish' - that the family is putting
their other son through graphic design college in UB. I also learned,
through sharing my MP3 player with them, that Baul and his family really
like the music of Lady Gaga. Mines and markets may be swayed or stalled,
but resistance to Gaga is futile.
Pop culture
is just one of the ways that Mongolia's
nomadic herders are connected to the broader world. Though it might
surprise many people, the vagaries of the global economy also reach
to the most remote plains of Mongolia.
As the world's markets contracted during the past two years, global
prices for cashmere wool - herders' most valuable product - fell. Many
herders in Mongolia
had grown increasingly to depend on the higher margins of cashmere sales,
and had begun raising a higher proportion of goats for cashmere due
to its profitability on the world market. But goats are insatiable grazers
that can lay bare entire swaths of delicate grasslands and worsen Mongolia's already serious problem
with desertification.
'There have
been droughts and zuds before, and lots of animals have starved before,'
Ono from Mongol Environmental Conservation says. 'The herders survived.
It's not just that there's overgrazing. It's now a matter of how to
make money, so when we talk about sustainability, are we talking about
environmental sustainability or economic sustainability?
'And then
you have the government in the middle,' Ono said later. 'And who do
you think they support?'
A good idea
of what the government supports can be found in the words of Mongolia's
Prime Minister, Sukhbaatar Batbold, who appeared on the Charlie Rose
show in September 2010 and said: 'We are already the Number Four exporter
of coal to China. We are a quite serious exporter
of copper to China,
and with our copper and gold project with Rio Tinto, we would easily
double and triple [copper] exports to China.
There is huge potential. On top of that, we have new commodities to
export to China
- iron ore, zinc - and we do have some prospects for oil and gas and
important reserves of uranium.'
Mongolia's
government may safely be described as pro-mining. It wants to develop
the mineral resources of its country - and it expects to gain significant
economic, social and political benefits from expansion of the mining
sector. Government officials want the $5 billion coming into the Oyu
Tolgoi copper and gold project, and they want the massive Tavan Tolgoi
coal project, the Boroo hard rock gold mine, the copper and molybdenum
operation at Erdenet-Ovoo, and another copper/molybdenum mine, the Tsagaan
Suvarga. They want the Nalayh coal mine in the north, the Oyut Ovoo
in the south-central part of the country, and the Zaamar gold mine dredging
operation on the Tuul
River. They want
the Dornod uranium mine and the Asgat silver mine. The Mongolian government
wants revenue from its recently renewed uranium exploration and extraction
ventures with Russia and Japan.
Government
officials are also eager to attract big, mining-related infrastructure
projects. Mongolia is partnering with a Finnish
mining technology company, Outotec, on a massive project to be located
in Sainshand that will smelt copper, process coal, and form part of
a new railway estimated to cost more than $2 billion to build.
Regardless
of whether the country wants them, Mongolia
is also welcoming the dangerous jobs and social problems that typically
plague mining operations. Mining towns begin as small camps that often
become quite large, with little planning or civic impulse. An overwhelmingly
male workforce comes for work in the mines while many women, faced with
few other economic opportunities in such places, turn to sex work. HIV/AIDS
and other sexually transmitted diseases often blossom. In a global economic
system where laws of supply and demand reign supreme, mining export
economies attract huge amounts of foreign money into an economy, causing
inflation and damaging other sectors of the industrial economy, a phenomenon
sometimes called 'Dutch Disease' that can be understood as 'too much
wealth managed unwisely'.
Despite such
drawbacks, the most salient question for Mongolians today is not whether
mining should occur there.
'There's no
point to [that question], because it's happening anyway,' Ono says.
'I've worked on different mining-related projects for a long time. We
fought for eight to ten years to stop mining companies, and it doesn't
happen. Why? Because it happens with or without you. Because it's what
the other half of the people want. It's an economic development concept.'
The practical
question, then, becomes how to have mining operations without losing
other important environmental or cultural resources. At this point,
harm reduction is the best that Mongolian environmentalists can do,
by trying to see strong government regulations are in place - and enforced.
Ono describes the main mission of the MEC as bringing together all stakeholders
to talk about environmental issues: 'In Mongolia, we have representatives from all sectors
as advisers to our project, including the State Secretary of the Ministry
of the Environment, and the President of the Academy of Sciences,
who's also an adviser to the Prime Minister. We have the water authority
and the government agency and the scientists under the water authority.
We have representatives from mining companies, and representatives from
grassroots and reclamation services. We have eco-tourism representatives.
What our programme does is bring representatives from all sectors so
they're sitting around one table and acting everything out and working
out solutions together.'
Even in a
country with advanced environmental laws and strict enforcement, the
very best case scenario for a mine involves an accident-free exploration
and extraction phase followed by an aggressive long-term, well-funded
reclamation plan that creates some approximation of the natural order
that went before. There is no single worst-case environmental scenario
for a mine. It could be staggering levels of water consumption, poisoned
watersheds, or toxic silt-choked rivers that asphyxiate fish. It could
be gaping open-pit mines and a surrounding dead zone created by any
number of toxins leaching into the ground, or areas known in the mining
industry as glory holes, where 'block-caving' operations, which involve
blasting deposits into tunnels dug below, create large areas of permanently
unstable earth on the surface.
Mongolian
and international environmentalists are warning that large-scale mining
in Mongolia will likely lead to such
problems. Profit rarely waits for caution. 'With mine reclamation tactics,
boom-and-bust is a proven. There just aren't a lot of examples of success
in post-mining land use,' says Paul Robinson, Research Director at the
New Mexico-based mining watchdog organisation Southwest Research and
Information Center, and an environmental analyst with years of experience
working in the Lake Baikal region that straddles the border of Russia
and Mongolia. 'Mining companies are designed to go out of business.
They form operating companies for specific mines. The main companies
are never liable, so the [reclamation] commitments they make are not
in good faith.
'What we need
to be doing,' Robinson says, 'is contemporaneous reclamation. Complete
environmental impact assessments and project plans to review before
any mining starts, so the full cost of reclamation is factored into
the budget of the mine, and reclamation costs can be paid up front,
as a deposit.'
Ono agrees.
'For the last years, it's been a vicious cycle. We try to stop them,
maybe we stop them, and they start operating again faster, doing more
harm to the environment and then running away. We're looking into what
standards they're following before they start operating.. You can't
stop all mining, but what you can say to mining companies is, "If
you cannot operate safely there in that river, then you cannot operate
there." People argue with me sometimes that the legal system is
corrupt, and yes, the legal system is corrupt, but we have to be able
to show something scientific, and be able to say, "This is the
problem legally," so it's not just personal passions.'
Ah yes, corruption.
Several days into my stay in the countryside, I read a copy of the English-language
Mongolian Messenger newspaper I'd brought from UB. In addition to a
metal-centric commodity price listings index on the front page, my edition
of the Messenger featured an article entitled 'Officials Defend False
Income Declarations', with this choice report: 'The Anti-Corruption
Agency found that [provincial] Governor Ts. Janlav did not declare his
private house where he now lives, four apartments which are owned by
his family members, [a] building with purpose for small-enterprise,
50 million [Mongolian, almost $40,000] income from selling his two-story
private house, as well as 23 percent of shares of Dornod Company that
is owned by his wife.'
Questions
So, can Mongolia's young government, commercial
institutions, regulatory infrastructure, and civil society manage their
mining boom in a way that doesn't involve extreme degradation? Can they
promote inclusive economic growth that lifts a majority of Mongolians,
or builds for a post-mining future? It's possible - mining law and reclamation
policy have come a long way fast in other parts of the world - but such
growth requires stability. The Mongolian Ministry of Nature and Environment
has been reorganised five times in the past 20 years. According to a
World Bank overview, Mongolia's 'deteriorating environmental
situation is exacerbated by irresponsible vested interests, poor coordination
among ministries and agencies, inadequate monitoring of natural resource
conditions and weak enforcement of environmental regulations.'
I sighed,
put the bad news down, and took a long walk away through floodplains
and over rolling steppes. The scale of things in Gorkhi-Terelj is more
suited to horseback riding than to walking, but I was a happy speck
moving slowly through dung-maculated valleys full of the bleached skulls,
spines, and other stray bone bits of departed animals. Daurian redstarts,
Siberian blue robins, and black kites flew near to me along my way.
The birds that perched did so near enough that I could have touched
them with my hand, and they looked at me inquisitive and unafraid.
With the sun
sinking perilously low on the horizon, I descended from the hills, through
birch and larch forest, and picked my way through moist lowlands, across
tufts of earth-like lily pads. I arrived just before night fell, and
Baul stoked the wood stove and brought hot milk tea his mother had made.
I sat drinking it, listened to the silence, and watched the last blue
of the sky fade in the circular hole in the centre of the ceiling.
On my flight
out of the country, I sat next to another miner, an American executive
named Robert, on his way from gold mining in Mongolia to an oil-drilling gig in Kazakhstan.
Robert was happy to talk about his business, about corruption and bribery,
and about how 'risk-averse' US and European mining companies were losing
out in the resource wars to their more daring Chinese and Russian counterparts.
He shared some sordid mining stories about Nigeria,
Mexico
and . Afghanistan?
Did the US have mining
operations in Afghanistan?
'Oh yeah,'
Robert said, leaning in confidingly: 'The Chinese just won the largest
copper mining bid in the world there after bribing a bunch of Afghan
officials, but that's not even the worst part.' He paused for dramatic
effect, then continued: 'The worst part is that it's the US
providing military protection for the Chinese to do it!'
But that's
another story, isn't it?
Brian Awehali
is an award-winning journalist and former Britannica.com editor who
founded the magazine, LiP: Informed Revolt and edited Tipping the Sacred
Cow (AK Press), an anthology of the magazine's best work. His blog lives
at loudcanary.com. He is a tribal member of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma. This article
originally appeared in the Winter 2011 edition of Earth Island
Journal (www.earthislandjournal.org).
*Third
World Resurgence No. 245/246, January/February 2011, pp 2-5
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