Current:Home > FinanceMexico takes mining company to court seeking new remediation effort for Sonora river pollution -Capital Dream Guides
Mexico takes mining company to court seeking new remediation effort for Sonora river pollution
View
Date:2025-04-22 21:44:51
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico is pursuing a criminal complaint against the country’s biggest copper producer seeking to force a new remediation effort for a toxic mine spill in the northern state of Sonora nine years ago, an environmental official said Thursday.
The complaint, which was filed in August but announced only on Thursday, centers on remediation funding for eight polluted townships in Sonora.
Mining company Grupo Mexico closed its remediation fund in 2017, arguing that it had met legal requirements.
The government contends that was premature and is asking the courts to order a new fund be established.
“The people, the environment are still contaminated and there are sick people,” said María Luisa Albores González, who heads the government’s Environment Department.
Albores described the August 2014 mine spill as “the most serious environmental disaster in the history of metal mining in Mexico.” Ten million gallons (40 million liters) of acidified copper sulfate flooded from a waste reservoir at Grupo Mexico’s Buenavista mine into the Sonora and Bacanuchi rivers.
The accident, about 62 miles (100 kilometers) from the city of Nogales, has left “alarming” levels of air, water and soil pollution across 94 square miles (250 square kilometers) to this day, according to a government report last month.
Grupo Mexico promised to establish 36 water treatment stations, but only 10 were installed and only two of those were finished, Albores said. Of the latter two, the one in the town of Bacan Noche ran for two years and the other in San Rafael de Aires ran for only a month before both ran out of funding, she said.
The company did not respond to an emailed request for comment on Albores’ announcement, but in a statement it issued last week in response to the government study it said its remediation efforts were successful and legally complete.
The government study “lacks any causal link with the event that occurred in 2014,” the statement said. “They fail to point out other current sources of pollution,” like farm runoff, sewage and other mining, it said,
Albores acknowledged Grupo Mexico’s response speaking to reporters Thursday. “They say: ‘Close the trust, because it has already complied’. It did not comply, it did not fulfill its objective,” she said.
Activists in the affected area were cautiously optimistic after hearing about the government’s legal action. “May there be justice for the people very soon,” said Coralia Paulina Souza Pérez, communications coordinator for local advocacy group PODER.
veryGood! (69)
Related
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- After Roe: A New Battlefield (2022)
- Intermittent fasting is as effective as counting calories, new study finds
- iCarly's Jerry Trainor Shares His Thoughts on Jennette McCurdy's Heartbreaking Memoir
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Book bans are on the rise. Biden is naming a point person to address that
- Climate Change is Pushing Giant Ocean Currents Poleward
- How a secret Delaware garden suddenly reemerged during the pandemic
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Soon after Roe was overturned, one Mississippi woman learned she was pregnant
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- 21 of the Most Charming Secrets About Notting Hill You Could Imagine
- Connecticut Program Makes Solar Affordable for Low-Income Families
- Rust armorer facing an additional evidence tampering count in fatal on-set shooting
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Honeybee deaths rose last year. Here's why farmers would go bust without bees
- A federal judge has blocked much of Indiana's ban on gender-affirming care for minors
- How many miles do you have to travel to get abortion care? One professor maps it
Recommendation
What to watch: O Jolie night
Inside Jeff Bezos' Mysterious Private World: A Dating Flow Chart, That Booming Laugh and Many Billions
Controversial Enbridge Line 3 Oil Pipeline Approved in Minnesota Wild Rice Region
U.S. Energy Outlook: Sunny on the Trade Front, Murkier for the Climate
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Arizona GOP election official files defamation suit against Kari Lake
'No kill' meat, grown from animal cells, is now approved for sale in the U.S.
A woman in Ecuador was mistakenly declared dead. A doctor says these cases are rare