Brazil reaches a $23 billion settlement with mining firms over a 2015
environmental disaster
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[October 26, 2024] By
GABRIELA SÁ PESSOA and ELÉONORE HUGHES
SAO PAULO (AP) — Brazil's federal government on Friday reached a
multibillion-dollar settlement with the mining companies responsible for
a 2015 dam collapse that the government said was the country's
worst-ever environmental disaster.
Under the agreement, Samarco — a joint venture of Brazilian mining giant
Vale and Anglo-Australian firm BHP — will pay 132 billion reais ($23
billion) over 20 years. The payments are meant to compensate for human,
environmental and infrastructure damage caused by the release of an
immense amount of toxic mining waste into a major river in southeastern
Minas Gerais state, killing 19 people and ravaging entire villages.
“We are fixing a disaster that could have been avoided, but wasn’t,”
President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said in a hall of the presidential
palace, surrounded by governors of the affected states, members of his
administration, reporters and victims.
Lula's speech, filled with criticism of what he called the mining
companies’ irresponsibility in chasing profit over safety, was met with
applause from the audience.
The toxic sludge — enough to fill 13,000 Olympic-size swimming pools —
flowed down the Doce River for 420 miles to the Atlantic Ocean,
contaminating waterways and coastal areas in two neighboring states.
The mining companies told the federal government during negotiations
that they had already paid 38 billion reais ($6.7 billion) in
reparations. In a statement Friday, Samarco said the agreement allowed
for the resolution of lawsuits related to the dam rupture.
Rodrigo Vilela, Samarco's president, said in the statement that the
collapse was a watershed in their history, which they “deeply regret and
will never forget.”
“The agreement signed today reinforces Samarco and its shareholders’
commitment to people, communities and the environment, ensuring the
continuation of full and definitive repair and compensation for the
damages,” he added.
The settlement includes compensation for more than 300,000 victims,
though that figure does not account for everyone affected. Twice as many
people — 620,000 — took their case to a UK court on Monday seeking
reparations.
The class action lawsuit at the High Court in London seeks an estimated
36 billion pounds ($47 billion) in damages from BHP. The case was filed
in Britain because one of BHP’s two main legal entities was based in
London at the time.
The London suit prompted the Brazilian Supreme Court's Chief Justice,
Luís Roberto Barroso, to personally seek Lula's commitment to ensure
parties reached an agreement domestically.
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A car and two dogs are on the roof of destroyed houses at the
small town of Bento Rodrigues after a dam burst in Minas Gerais
state, Brazil, Nov. 6, 2015. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana, File)
“I spoke with Lula and said, ‘Mr.
President, there is a case abroad, and it will be very damaging to
the Brazilian courts if this matter is resolved outside the
country,’” Barroso said Friday at the presidential palace.
The Brazilian federal government said victims would
receive 35,000 reais ($6,150) each, while fishermen and farmers
would be paid 95,000 reais ($17,000) in total through monthly
installments over four years.
Cristiano Sales, 42, was born and raised in Bento Rodrigues, one of
the districts in the municipality of Mariana that was washed over by
the sludge nine years ago. When he returned to the ruins of his
house three months later, the only item he found was a jersey from
his favorite soccer team, Cruzeiro.
Sales lives in a new house in a neighborhood built by the mining
companies as part of compensation to his father. After filing a
lawsuit, he personally received 100,000 reais ($18,000) and is still
pursuing additional reparations through the London suit.
“Money can’t pay for what we’ve been through here," he said. "We
take the money because it’s our right. But to say that 100,000 or
even 200,000 or 300,000 could bring back the life we had — I don’t
think any amount of money can do that.”
Melbourne, Australia-based BHP said in a statement on Oct. 19 it
believes the U.K. action is unnecessary because it duplicates
matters covered by reparation efforts and legal proceedings in
Brazil, but will continue to defend itself.
Pogust Goodhead, the law firm representing the plaintiffs, said
Friday the settlement in Brazil shouldn’t have any impact on the
London case and that there will be no double compensation. The firm
added that its clients were excluded from the negotiations and are
still pursuing full reparations for unresolved damages.
“The Mariana agreement signed this Friday in Brazil demonstrates
that, after 9 years of negligence, the mining companies have finally
decided to react to the pressure from public opinion and the trial
in England, which began last Monday,” the law firm said in a
statement. “Even so, the amounts defined are far from covering the
profound losses suffered by the victims, who continue to fight for
justice and full reparations.”
___
Hughes reported from Bento Rodrigues, Brazil.
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