Copper Mine Menaces Armenia’s Teghut Forest

COPPER MINE MENACES ARMENIA’S TEGHUT FOREST

ENS
Jul 11 2007

YEREVAN, Armenia, July 11, 2007 (ENS) – Virgin forests surrounding the
village of Teghut in northern Armenia are being destroyed to make way
for a giant copper mine, warn Armenian and American conservationists
who are appealing to the Armenian government to stop the mine.

But many Teghut villagers do not oppose the mine because nearly
half of local residents are unemployed and have no means to feed
their families.

They appear unconcerned about ecologists’ warning that Teghut will
become a dead zone in 25 years and the rare and endangered birds,
mammals, reptiles, fish, and unique fruit trees of the Teghut forest
will disappear.

The damage in Teghut Forest has already begun. April 2007. (Photo
courtesy Armenia Tree Project) In June 2006, the mining enterprise
Armenian Copper Program created a new company, Teghut, to exploit the
copper-molybdenum deposits in the Teghut forest, taking advantage of a
continuing increase in copper prices. The company plans to clearcut at
least 1,500 acres to make way for the open pit strip mining operation.

Exploration work has begun and many trees have already been cut
down. Roads for trucks have been paved through the forest and digging
equipment has been brought in.

The Armenian Copper Program plans to put a mine tailings dump in the
nearby gorge of the Kharatanots River, where conservationists warn
that heavy metals and other toxic mine waste will leach into the soil
and groundwater, polluting the area’s drinking water.

In order to set up the tailing structure, the company plans to change
the course of the Kharatanots River. Environmentalists worry that
the new course will only be maintained for 25 years – the life of
the mine – after which there is no guarantee that the company will
continue to remediate the artificial flow.

The Teghut forest is inhabited by animals and plants registered in
Armenia’s Red Book of Endangered Species, including the rock eagle,
snake eagle, and gray bear and Trautvetter’s maple, and Caucasian
persimmon. Their habitat will be destroyed by the mine.

On June 20, the nonprofit Armenia Tree Project issued an action alert
by email to thousands of its supporters and colleagues, urging them
to write Armenian President Robert Kocharian asking him to protect
this treasured forest.

Armenian President Robert Kocharian (Photo courtesy Office of the
President)

"Rather than destroy the Teghut Forest, we propose that it be made
into a Nature Reserve as part of a concerted effort to develop
sustainable tourism in the valley," Armenia Tree Project Executive
Director Jeff Masarjian wrote in his appeal to the President. "Tourism
is a sustainable form of economic development that benefits the local
population without causing permanent damage to the environment."

"Teghut could attract people from around the world who want to see
the rich landscape, biodiversity, and cultural heritage that is unique
to this area," writes Masarjian.

To date, President Kocharian has not responded to the appeal.

The Armenia Tree Project is a member of SOS Teghut, a consortium
of 26 organizations that supports the need for sustainable economic
development in the country, but opposes development that will leave
the land permanently degraded and poisoned.

In September 2005, the coalition sent a letter to Valery Mejlumyan, the
president of Armenian Copper, voicing their concern over the possible
destruction of the Teghut forest and inviting him to meet with them.

Mejlumyan did not reply.

The company’s plans for eight years of mining at Teghut have been
approved by the Armenian Ministry of Nature Protection, although the
life of the mine is estimated at 25 years.

These NGOs say the government’s decision to permit the Teghut mine
is illegal.

Greens Union President Hakob Sanasaryan says the project activities
have been intentionally presented only in part, which is unprecedented
and illegal.

By presenting the project bit by bit the company is seeking to cover
up the real amount of damage to the environment, said Sanasaryan.

"If the company gains permission for the first stage of mining and
work begins," he said, "then the process will become unstoppable."

President of the Socio-Ecological Association Srbuhi Harutyunyan says
77 articles in various laws are being violated, including 14 articles
of the law on environmental impact assessment.

Company Executive Director Gagik Arzumanyan told reporters in February
that incomplete information on environmental damage has been presented
because there are consequences that cannot be predicted at this point.

"Yes, the project does not have all the information for the period
of 25 years. In the project, we have tried to show those indicators
which are predictable for a period of eight years of mining,"
Arzumanyan said.

A snake eagle soars over Armenia. Its habitat will be destroyed by
the copper mine. Summer 2005. (Photo courtesy Jan-Michael Breider
Arzumanyan called the conservationists’ allegations of illegallity
"negligible" and attempted to shift attention away from the company’s
logging of the Teghut forest by pointing out the damage done across
the country by other loggers acting illegally.

Minister for Nature Protection Vardan Ayvazyan supported the
company’s position. "Only 60 thousand cubic meters of wood will be
cleared. According to a study by the World Bank, illegal logging in
Armenia comes to an annual volume of 600-700 thousand cubic meters
of wood. These are more serious numbers," Ayvazyan told reporters.

Environmentalists say such comparisons are absurd. The Teghut mine
will destroy rivers, soil, air, and animals as well as trees, they
point out.

"As an expert, I say with conviction that cutting down even a few trees
on slopes such as these would lead to soil erosion," said Harutyunyan.

"After the mining is done, we would have a pit in northern Armenia
around 400-500 meters deep, and the territory would be considered one
of increasing degradation," he said. "What does this have to do with
illegal logging?"

Masarjian says the Armenian Copper Program is already polluting
northern Armenia with its Alaverdi copper mine and smelter, which
processes copper ore for a consortium of mining companies in the
Lori region.

"The Alaverdi smelter, notorious for belching tens of thousands of tons
of sulfur oxides annually into the atmosphere, is having disastrous
effects on the health and well-being of the local population," said
Masarjian. "The smelter has no emission controls, and the company
claims to be unable to afford the cost of installing them."

Since the smelter re-opened in the late 1990s, the town of Alaverdi
has reported an increase in cases of respiratory disease, sterility,
and birth defects.

But Teghut community leader Harutyun Meliksetian says the villagers
must make a living. If they cannot find work, he said, "Teghut will
become an uninhabited area sooner or later."

The company has assured the villagers of Teghut, four kilometers from
the mine site, and of Singh, six kilometers away, that they would
not have to be relocated.

But Sanasaryan of the Greens Union says residents will be forced to
leave by the environmental disaster that the mine will create.

"Twenty-five years later the place would be a desert," he said. "The
tailings and wastes, containing heavy metals, would penetrate the
soil, water and air, causing disease, ruining the produce and sharply
reducing soil fertility. Naturally, the people there would then be
forced to leave."

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS