Owners of big copper mine fined $77,000 in Peru
LIMA,
Peru (AP) — Peru's environment minister says the government has fined
the owners of one of the world's largest zinc and copper mines $77,000
for a toxic slurry spill last year that
sickened dozens of villagers.
Minister
Manuel Pulgar-Vidal tells The Associated Press that the Antamina
consortium was fined for infractions that included a delay in alerting
authorities. Immediately after the July
25 spill, he had called for the maximum penalty of $13 million.
Pulgar-Vidal
says that under standards set since the spill, Antamina would have
faced a higher fine. The new rules set a maximum fine of $41 million for
a single incident of environmental
contamination.
Antamina's owners are BHP Billiton, Glencore-Xstrata, Teck Cominco and Mitsubishi Corp.
The slurry caused nosebleeds, nausea, blurred vision and headaches. Some villagers complain of recurring symptoms.
(and who says you only get environmental catastrophes in China?)
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