Thanks very much.
Just to jump right in, I wanted to just ponder for a moment: what's the attraction of a bilateral agreement for a Canadian mining company considering investment or further investment in Honduras? Generally, this is to reduce risk for a company by locking in the current operating environment, giving them a sense of stability concerning the regulatory and taxation terms that are in effect when they invest. It also is to give them access to possibly the most powerful binding arbitration tool in the world today that allows corporations to launch costly lawsuits against governments when they, their people, or even their courts, make decisions that companies don't like. Even if a corporation loses, the initial stages in such a process can cost both parties millions of dollars that would be much better spent.
I want to talk first about this. What is the operating environment today in Honduras? In other words, what would this agreement lock in?
While the last few years, and especially the last few months of the outgoing government of former President Lobo have been marked by the ramming through of literally hundreds of legislative reforms, l'm going to focus on just one piece of legislation that is highly relevant to the mining sector: the new Canadian-backed mining law that was passed in January 2013. This law was developed and passed with strong diplomatic support from the Canadian embassy, and with contributions from the Department of Foreign Affairs and the former Canadian International Development Agency.
The Canadian government and mining industry, along with the industrial mining association in Honduras, pushed for this law principally in order to lift a moratorium that had been in place in Honduras on new mining concessions and projects since 2006. This moratorium was put in place by ousted President Mel Zelaya, under pressure from the Honduran civil society, who had been fighting for legislative reforms for years as a result of the weaknesses in the legal framework to respond to the impacts on their water and health that communities in the Siria Valley, around Goldcorp's San Martin mine, started experiencing very shortly after this mine went into operation.
We can also safely assume, I believe, that the Canadian government and industry undertook the process to try to get this new law in the context of the highly repressive and violent post-coup environment from 2010 to 2013, in order to ensure that the mining law wouldn't end up looking like the proposed mining bill that had been waiting in the wings and that was ready for debate prior to the military-backed coup of June 2009. The 2009 bill, which was supposed to be debated in August 2009, included key civil society proposals, including a ban on open-pit mining, a ban on the use of cyanide and mercury in mineral processing, and a requirement for community approval prior to the granting of mining concessions.
So what's in the new law? There are just a few points. It leaves the door open to open-pit mining. Water sources, except for those that have been declared and registered, which are in a minority, are not protected. Mining is not prohibited in populated areas, meaning that forced expropriation and displacement of entire communities can continue to take place. Community consultation is to take place, but only after exploration has occurred and there's a contract established with mining companies. This is a very late stage in the mining process to undertake consultation, and it means that while a community could presumably state its position on mining at this stage, were there local opposition and the state of Honduras took this seriously, the government would face a high probability of being sued under such a free trade agreement as that which we’re discussing today. This law also divvies up a new 6% royalty on mineral sales from metal mining projects into several pots, in particular a 2% tax for security forces.
Even without looking at what's going on on the ground right now, we can foresee that the conditions are very ripe for conflict, first, with communities who are strongly opposed to open-pit mining. In 2011, a public opinion survey carried out by the research centre for democracy found that some 90% of Hondurans are opposed to open-pit mining.
Second, we have the communities that are fighting to protect key water sources or to stay on their land. This law enables and favours companies that might monopolize local water supplies for industrial mining operations. It could lead to the displacement of entire communities that might be in the way of new projects, putting at grave risk the survival and economic sustenance of peasant farmer communities.
This is a continuation of weaknesses under the earlier mining law regime that put communities such as those in the Siria Valley, around Goldcorp's San Martin mine, at a tremendous disadvantage. It has led to the loss of local water supplies, the displacement of an entire community, and long-term risk from the environment and public health risks of acid mine drainage, which was observed by a leading expert from Newcastle University, in 2008.
Third, I fear that the new security tax on mining production provides a direct incentive to corrupt security forces to protect mining installations instead of people's safety, which should be their first and foremost concern. I think the earlier speakers have already gone into the terrible track record of the Honduran state forces.
What have we been hearing about mining in Honduras since the new mining law was passed? I’m going to give a couple of examples.
First, in northern Honduras, in the mountains just inland from the Caribbean coast, in the agricultural community of Nueva Esperanza in the municipality of Tela, there's been an ongoing fight over a new iron ore mining project that’s owned by the son-in-law of one of the country's richest men. The community has complained that they were not consulted, and in mid-2013, they were already reporting heavy sedimentation contaminating a local river.
In June of last year, the Honduras accompaniment project reported that armed men entered the community under police escort to provide security for the mine. Both police and armed men in this case have been reportedly been involved in threatening and intimidating acts against the community. In particular, armed men have targeted community members who refuse to sell their land. Community members have reported death threats, and nightly curfews during the summer months. In July 25, 2013, armed men also held captive two human rights accompaniers from France and Switzerland, from the Honduras accompaniment project, under threat for several hours. A number of local residents were forced to flee in August 2013.
There are further examples that we could go into, but just to note, in the Siria Valley, where Goldcorp has their San Martin project, well-known environmental activist, community reporter, and teacher, Carlos Amador, has publicly denounced being watched and followed by unknown individuals using vehicles with tinted windows and without licence plates over the last few months; his life is believed to be under serious threat. And local communities in this area are concerned about the approval of new mining concessions that they have insufficient information about.
Right now we can say that there's a state of fear and violence for campesinos and activists fighting to protect their water, their lands, and their right to speak out about the damages of mining, without protection from the state or their own justice system.
If we could imagine that it wasn’t this way, what if the tide shifted and the Honduran government actually made significant efforts to respect the will of communities and to better protect their water supplies, their living environment, and their right to decide what development is good for them? What would happen? The situation in El Salvador provides a poignant example.
Right now, Vancouver-based Pacific Rim Mining, currently owned by OceanaGold, an Australian-Canadian firm, is suing El Salvador for more than $301 million after failing to obtain the social and environmental licence needed to develop a gold mine in the department of Cabañas, and after encountering nation-wide opposition to metal mining in the country.
Notably, Pacific Rim did not meet regulatory regulation requirements necessary to obtain a mining permit in El Salvador; it relied instead on political lobbying. Nor did Pacific Rim undertake adequate studies to understand, much less mitigate, potential adverse effects from the El Dorado project, especially on water supplies. Whether or not the company ultimately wins or loses the arbitration case, which is ongoing, El Salvador has already spent $5 million fighting the suit, which is enough to provide one year of adult literacy classes for 140,000 people. Meanwhile, several environmental activists have been killed, others repeatedly threatened, and the policy development area in the mining sector has stagnated.
So, were a future government in Honduras to come along that would stand up for what Honduran communities have been calling for in terms of respect for their right to decide and to adequately protect water supplies and the environment, they would likely be slapped with another suit of this sort under the current free trade agreement such as the one being debated today.
Just to sum up, what would a free trade agreement between Canada and Honduras do in the mining sector? It would lock in an unjust arrangement for communities that did not provide guarantee of protection for adequate consultation, protection of land and water supplies, or sufficient recourse when things go wrong. It is also taking place in an environment where they are facing targeted threats on a regular basis. At the same time it shores up very powerful protections for companies that will be able to resort to an arbitration mechanism that goes above and beyond the Honduran justice system into which communities have no reach.
Thank you very much.