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Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor
GDXJ 121.59+2.2%Dec 26 4:00 PM EST

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To: IngotWeTrust who wrote (80869)1/18/2002 2:58:12 PM
From: long-gone  Read Replies (1) of 116833
 
On the general topic of gold here's some tripe from gold haters:
The Gold Album: Action Pack -- Fool's Gold poster
order the Gold Album and other Project Underground reports

download complete Gold Album PDF (w/Fool's Gold informational poster)
2.3 MB PDF file requires Adobe® Acrobat® Reader. You can download the free Acrobat® Reader from Adobe®.

THE GOLD ALBUM
Introduction
The Global Gold Business
Gold Reserves and Mineworkers
Gold Consumption
Case Studies:
Western Shoshone
Ghana
Peru
Phillipines
Cyanide
Mercury
Acid Mine Drainage
Statement of Unity
Informational Poster:
Fool's Gold
Ten Problems with Gold Mining


Fool's Gold:
Ten Problems with Gold Mining
Over 85% of gold mined today will end up as jewelry tomorrow.

Gold mining is not an essential industry like the harvesting of food or even paper production. It is certainly not sustainable, nor is it just.

Yet the cumulative impacts of gold mining worldwide, on local economies and ecosystems, is at least as bad as that of industrial forestry and agri-business. With more than 66% of all new mining exploration in the hard-rock sector currently focused on gold1, the problems are going to get worse for people and places around the planet. Here’s just a sample:

1. Genocide
Every major gold rush has meant death and devastation for local people at the hands offortune-seekers. The Mayans believed the Conquistadors ate gold — how else could they explain their insatiable lust for it? Californian Indian nations were decimated; first by the disease the 49ers brought with them, and then by the new Californian state government which put bounties on the heads of native people. The new government paid out a million dollars from its gold revenues for scalps in 1851 alone. From the Sioux of the Black Hills, to the Aborigines around Bendigo in Australia, the history of gold is tainted with blood; and today Amazonian tribes, like the Yanomami and Macuxi, the Galamsey of West Africa, and the Igorot of the Philippines are similarly endangered.

2. Water
Damage to water and water resources is the worst environmental consequence of gold mining. From California’s Sierra Nevada in the 1850s to the lands of the Pemon in Venezuela today, rivers have been ruined by people panning for gold, using high pressure hoses to spray down river banks and sift through the sediment for gold. The effects flow downstream, destroying plant and fish life. But modern mining is even more destructive of water resources: the gold industry in Nevada — where most gold in the US is mined — consumes more water than all the people in the state2. The water table has fallen as much as 1,000 feet around some of the largest open pit gold mines in north — eastern Nevada, says the U.S. Geological Survey. One of the mines consumes 100 million gallons per day — as much as the city of Austin, Texas. And that’s not all: water systems around mines are contaminated by cyanide and other process chemicals, and the acid mine drainage that runs off exposed rock3.

3. Waste Rock
To make a simple gold wedding band, at least 2.8 tons of earth are excavated. The gold mining industry generates an enormous amount of waste compared to its product: the 2,402 tons of gold produced in 1997 resulted in 725 million tons of waste, which was contaminated with metals, acids, and solvents, according to Worldwatch Institute. The standard ratio of waste production in the United States gold mining industry is one to 3 million, meaning that for every ton of gold produced there are three million tons of waste rock. Most of the unsightly mess left behind is exposed to weathering and will ultimately leach acid and heavy metals associated with the gold into the local area at great ecological cost.

4. Free Access
In many countries, gold mining companies are allowed “free entry” to public lands — the most incredible corporate welfare — for mineral exploitation. In the US, it’s not entirely free — but the companies need only pay $5 an acre to “patent” a patch of federal land. This means the title is transferred to this private interest and is open to mining, ignoring any other values whether these be ecological, recreational or spiritual. Since 1872 the government has “sold” land equivalent in size to the state of Connecticut, under this law4. This land contained $245 billion worth of minerals! Developing countries are adopting similar land access policies as well, pushed by corporate advisors: since 1994, more than 70 countries have changed their laws to attract foreign gold mining companies. As a result the gold mining industry in the global South is booming: between 1991 and 1997, exploration investments expanded 6 times in Latin America, quadrupled in the Pacific region, and doubled in Africa. Since a new “pro-development” mining act was adopted in 1995 in the Philippines, over a quarter of the land surface of the country has been handed over as gold mining prospects.

5. Indigenous Rights
In the United States — the second biggest producer of gold in the world — more than 70% of gold is ripped from native lands. The Western Shoshone, whose traditional domain covers most of Nevada, are the unhappy hosts to more than three dozen open-pit gold mines on their land, many at least a mile wide and a mile deep, with toxic ponds at the bottom. The Western Shoshone have continually been denied their land and treaty rights, as the United States increasingly allocates Nevada to multinational mining companies rather than to the rightful owners. The story is repeated around the globe. In Ghana, in the mid-1990s, thousands of traditional farmers were evicted and replaced for World Bank-sponsored gold mining operations covering hundreds of square kilometers. It is now estimated that 50% of gold produced in the next 20 years will come from indigenous peoples’ lands.

6. Cyanide
Cyanide is the chemical-of-choice for mining companies to extract gold from crushed ore. Very low-grade ore, with minimal residues of gold, is crushed and piled on the ground, then sprayed with a cyanide solution. No mine has ever avoided leaking cyanide-laced water and waste into the ecosystem. In Kyrgyzstan, a major cyanide spill in 1998 resulted in 4 deaths and the evacuations of thousands of people living downstream of a Canadian-owned gold mine. At one U.S. mine, Summitville, taxpayers have already paid out $100 million in a few years for the EPA to simply contain — not clean up — contamination of local rivers. Meanwhile, a spill of billions of gallons of cyanide laced-waste from the Omai mine in Guyana caused the death of thousands of fish and scores of other animals downstream.

7. Mercury
For centuries, mercury has been used to chemically separate gold from ore, leading to major public health problems for miners and communities living around mineral districts. During the California Gold Rush, 7,600 tons of mercury were released into local rivers and lakes, resulting in neurological disorders and deaths amongst people exposed to this deadly toxin — at that time, mercury poisoning was known as “mad hatter’s disease”. More than 50% of mercury exposure today in the San Francisco Bay area is an historic legacy of the 1849 gold rush. Furthermore, millions of small-scale miners use mercury, from the Amazon5 — where they have invaded indigenous reservations — to the Philippines, resulting in the worst outbreaks in recent history of what we now know as Minamata Disease, and many other horrors. Of 500,000 “garimpeiros” (gold miners) tested in Brazil, more than 30% of them showed mercury levels above the World Health Organization’s tolerable limits.

8. Dowry
Most gold is sold as jewelry and most of that is consumed in India. This is not however a simple tale of vanity or non-essential, excessive consumption. The women who wear it are themselves victims of the yellow metal: it is given as part of their dowry in wedding ceremonies and it remains the only form of wealth most Indian women are allowed to own and control. The repression of women in India is wrapped up in gold. Their emancipation may be advanced by rejecting the system of hoarding wealth in the form of gold jewelry — a phenomenon which has boomed with the growing disposable income of the country’s middle-class — and paying it as a fee to get a man’s hand in marriage.

9. Dud Investment
According to Merrill Lynch, gold is “the duddest of dud investments”6. Ever since the US dollar was decoupled from the gold standard, gold as a commodity has had no special value, with only 280 tons going to industrial uses per year, and yet some people continue to hoard it. The price of gold has been slowly dropping and is now well below the price of its production at many modern mines, which means companies mining new or “virgin” gold are a bad investment. Even the 35,000 tons of gold bullion held in central banks have lost 30% of their value over the last decade — a huge waste of taxpayer assets.

10. Ecosystem Impacts
Contamination and waste of water, destruction of habitat and biodiversity, industrialization of wilderness, roadbuilding, and the dumping of huge volumes of waste in mined areas all negatively impact the environment around gold mines. “Frontier forests” — the last remaining old growth stands — are under seige by gold exploration. Fisheries suffer from heavy siltation and toxic run-off into waterways from gold mines. Today, all mines scrape away and dig up more earth than do the world’s rivers through natural erosion! The impact on wildlife is hard to calculate but between 1980 and 1990 seven thousand birds were found dead near cyanide-laced ponds at gold mines in California, Nevada and Arizona alone — the tip of the iceberg of gold mine — related deaths.

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STATEMENT OF UNITY
In June 1999, people affected by gold mining in 21 countries — including workers from South Africa and women’s rights activists from India — came together to share infromation and strategize around their common cause. This is their consensus.

We, the participants of the Peoples’ Gold Summit, San Juan Ridge, California, June 2 - 8, 1999, have concluded that:

Life, land, clean water and clean air are more precious than gold. All peoples depend on nature for life. The right to life is a guaranteed human right. It is, therefore, our responsibility to protect all of nature for present and future generations.

Large-scale gold mining violently uproots and destroys the spiritual, cultural, political, social and economic lives of peoples as well as entire ecosystems. Historic and current destruction created by gold mining is greater than any value generated.

Commercial gold mining projects are mainly on indigenous lands. By violating their land rights mining companies are denying the right to life of those indigenous peoples, whose relationship to land is central to their spiritual identity and survival. We need to support the self-determination of indigenous peoples and the recovery, demarcation and legal recognition of campesinos, tribal and indigenous peoples’ lands.

Communities in mining-affected areas, following a democratic and open decision-making process, have rights to the use, control and management of resources; prior informed consent to any proposals which affect their land and/or resources; and to reject any proposal that impacts their human rights. There must be participatory processes to build and maintain sustainable economies at all levels as an alternative to the current destructive patterns of development, including gold mining.

Large-scale and small-scale, toxic chemical-dependent gold mining damages landscapes, habitats, biodiversity, human health and water resources. Water especially is contaminated by cyanide, acid mine drainage, heavy metals and mercury from gold mining. Additionally, the hydrologic cycle is changed and water sources are grossly depleted by pumping water from aquifers.

Most governments continue to represent the interests of mining corporations against people. They have made laws to take away land and rights from people to facilitate gold mining. We need to achieve self-determination and work towards local self-sufficiency in order to break the chains of dependency on external sources. At a national level we reject the debt-ridden economic model of mineral extraction.

It is the responsibility of governments of countries where the multinational corporations come from to hold them accountable, wherever they operate, to their domestic environmental and social protection requirements. This is to ensure no double standards. Shareholders and investors in gold mining companies must be held responsible for their corporations’ actions.

International and domestic laws should support the rights of local communities, tribal and indigenous peoples and the right of all people to ecological security, not the security of corporations. Oppressive laws and macroeconomic policies, such as those pushed by the World Trade Organization, are imposed on peoples and places. These influences must be resisted, and all laws and policies made in accordance with customary and human rights law and the balance of ecosystems.

Given that gold is indestructible, known reserves could provide for market demand for the foreseeable future. The current trend to sell gold reserves by central banks therefore offers an alternative to gold mining to provide for market demands, but must be considered carefully in light of its social and economic ramifications. In particular, there must be just transitions for workers who lose their jobs and livelihoods whenever gold mines close. After closure of a mine, companies have a duty and mandatory obligation for social, environmental, and economic rehabilitation of the community and the miners.

Although some consumers of gold are victims of social and economic systems, their consumption drives the development of gold mines with all their negative impacts. Gold-dependent communities must be supported in making a transition to economically and environmentally sustainable and nondiscriminatory forms of economic activity.

We demand:
a moratorium on exploration for gold.

a ban on new, large-scale and toxic chemical-dependent gold mining.

that where the peoples and / or environment demands closure, the mine should be immediately decommissioned in an environmentally and socially responsible manner.

that gold mining companies set up community-controlled funds to pay for the just transitions of workers retrenched from the sector; for the creation of healthy, alternative economies; and to pay for clean-up, monitoring and remediation of gold mines, long after they are closed.

an end to all military, paramilitary and mercenary activity used to repress people and secure mining.

that international financial institutions must not fund new gold mines or gold mining companies.

that governments stop their support and subsidies of gold mining companies.

sustainable alternatives for communities in place of gold mining as the primary economic activity.

that governments must demarcate the lands and respect the complete territorial rights of campesino, indigenous and tribal peoples.

that any gold mining that does occur should be managed only in the strictest environmentally and socially-safe way, and should not include submarine or riverine tailings disposal nor seabed extraction.
To ensure that these demands are realized, peoples’ organizations commit to make a coordinated approach to address the environmental and social threats of gold mining. (For more information about the Peoples’ Gold Summit or a copy of the Proceedings, call Project Underground at 1 510 705 8981 or email <project_underground@moles.org>).

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A SOLUTION: MINE THE VAULTS FIRST!
“Notwithstanding the almost inconceivable value attached to these masses of silver and gold, it is probable that they are really of no benefit to the world. They are obtained at the expense of immense toil, severe privation, and prodigious waste of life. The labor bestowed upon the pursuit of humbler minerals, or even in agriculture, would doubtless have yielded more solid advantages to mankind.”

(from “Enterprise, Industry and Art of Man,” Boston, 1848.)

For centuries, people have understood that gold mining is a big problem for both land and people.

The good news: there is an answer to the plague of gold mining sweeping the globe. If people want to wear gold, use it to fill cavities, or for micro-circuitry in computers and cell phones, that’s fine — but take it from recycled sources. We should mine the bank vaults first.

Of the 125,000 tons of gold ever dug out of the ground, more than 35,000 tons of it lies in the vaults of central reserve banks, at places like Fort Knox. In fact the US Federal Reserve owns 8,145 tons of gold7 — about 6% of all the gold ever mined — and the government’s own studies show there is a net economic benefit in selling some of this stock.

Enough gold for more than 350 years of current, so-called “essential” use lies above the ground in bank vaults — we can recycle this stock for the few uses for which there is no substitute. Otherwise, all that bullion will keep gathering dust in the bowels of Fort Knox — where it doesn’t even accrue interest — while natural and human communities’ homes are dug up for jewelry.


WORLD GOLD HOLDINGS, END 1997
Advice to investors: dump gold before it dumps you.

To compoundthis waste, the Fed’s gold reserves have depreciated by 30% in the last decade. Every market indication predicts that the decline will continue, with smart governments around the world selling off their stock. Our advice: dump gold before it dumps you.

Belgium sold a third of its gold in the last two years and Australia dropped 200 tons onto the market — that’s why the price per ounce went below US$300. England, surprized some in May 1999, but Luxembourg, the Czech Republic, and Argentina8 have all realized how much they can benefit from selling gold holdings recently.

GOVERNMENT AND MULTILATERAL INSTITUTIONAL HOLDINGS
1965 - 1995

Switzerland will hold a referendum in the year 2000 on selling two thirds of the national gold reserve. According to the Union Bank of Switzerland8, a much smarter investment by the government, such as US Treasury bonds, could earn the average Swiss household $400 a year, generating major spending power and economic benefits throughout Europe.

A downside of the sale of central gold reserves is that the first mines to close may be those in South Africa — the last labor-intensive gold mining sector in the world. This will affect hundreds of thousands of miners directly, and millions more who are dependent on the cash income these men bring home. The South African gold mines have not been good to these men — being a pillar of South Africa under apartheid, and the cause of one death and a dozen injuries for every ton of gold produced — but they do provide a source of livelihood.

However, regardless of whether governments of the world choose to dump their stocks of bullion on the open market, South Africa’s mines cannot compete with cyanide-based open-pit, capital-intensive operations in the rest of the world.The writing is on the wall for these deep-shaft mines. The companies which have profited from one hundred years of back-breaking work in South Africa should be held responsible for the re-training of miners and the creation of schemes for just transitions of all those members of the community dependent on mining.

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CONTACT LIST:
COECO (Friends of the Earth-Costa Rica)
Paseo Colon, de la Pizza Hut
250 metros al norte
San Jose, Costa Rica
Tel: +506 223 3925
email: prsj2cr@sol.racsa.co.cr
ISODEC/Third World Network-Africa
PO Box 19452
Accra-North, Ghana
Tel: +233 21 306069
email: WAPPIAH@ighmail.com

Western Shoshone Defense Project
PO Box 211308
Crescent Valley, NV 89821, USA
Tel: +1 775 468 0230
email: wsdp@igc.org
www.alphacdc.com/wsdp

Mining Advocacy Network (JATAM)
Jl. Mampang Prapatan II No. 30 RT 015/RW04
Jakarta 12790--Indonesia
Tel: +62-(021)-794 1559
email: jatam@jakarta.wasantara.net.id

Federation of Rondas Campesinas
of Northern Peru
Urbanizacion El Bosque,
Manzana 4, Lote 7
Cajamarca, Peru
Tel: +51 44 826 143
email: ferocafe@net.telematic.com.pe

Minewatch Asia/Mining Communities
Development Center
111 Upper General Luna Rd., Agpaoa Compound
Baguio City 2600, Philippines
Tel: +63 74 443 9459
email: bongcorpuz@phil.gn.apc.org
Mineral Policy Center
1612 K St., NW, Suite 808
Washington, D.C. 20006, USA
Tel: +1 202 887 1872
email: mpc@mineralpolicy.org
www.mineralpolicy.org
Mineral Policy Institute
PO Box 21
Bondi Junction, NSW 1355, Australia
Tel: +61 2 938 5540
email: inform@mpi.org.au
www.mpi.org.au

MiningWatch Canada
880 Wellington St., suite 508
Ottawa, Ontario K1R 6K7, Canada
Tel: +1 613 569 3439
email: mwc@magma.ca

GoldBusters
PO Box 368
Lismore, NSW 2480, Australia
Tel: +61 2 66 218505
email: RRosenhek@aol.com
www.forests.org/ric/

Environmental Mining Council
of British Columbia
201--607 Yates St.
Victoria, B.C., Canada V8W 247
Tel: +1 250 384 2686
email: emcbc@miningwatch.org

Project Underground
1916A MLK Jr Way,
Berkeley CA 94704 USA
Tel: +1 510 705 8981
email: shanna@moles.org


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REFERENCES
Vital Signs 1998, by Lester R. Brown, Michael Renner, Christopher Flavin; published by Worldwatch Institute, 1998
"Billions of gallons of water from gold mines flowing downstream”; Scott Sonner, Associated Press, 30th March 1999.
“Golden Dreams, Poisoned Streams”, Mineral Policy Institute,Washington DC, 1997.
“Mining Industry Subsidies”, Mineral Policy Center Fact Sheet – Mining Law Reform Series.
“After the Gold Rush”, unpublished article by Dominic Hamilton, San Francisco.
“The Gold Rush in Reverse”, The Spectator of London, Edward H Amory, August 22nd, 1998.
“Mineral Commodity Summaries”, United States Geological Survey, January 1999.
Gold as a Reserve Asset, Background Information, World Gold Council website, 1998.
“Losing the Midas Touch”, The Economist, November 22nd, 1997.
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