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HomeEnvironment and SustainabilityMining and Natural Hazard Vulnerability in the Philippines
Mining and Natural Hazard Vulnerability in the Philippines
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Mining and Natural Hazard Vulnerability in the Philippines

Digging to Development or Digging to Disaster?

R. Daniel Jacobson and William N. Holden

Anthem Environmental Studies



Title Details

ISBN: 9780857287762

Pages: 306

Pub Date: February 2012

Imprint: Anthem Press

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The archipelago of the Philippines is well endowed in nonferrous mineral resources such as copper, gold, lead, silver, nickel, and zinc. In recent years, the government of the Philippines, acting under the influence of the dominant and seemingly ubiquitous neoliberal development paradigm, has liberalized its mining laws to encourage the extraction of minerals by foreign corporations in order to accelerate the development of the economy. The Philippines is also a nation highly prone to a variety of natural hazards such as earthquakes, volcanoes, tsunamis, typhoons, and El Niño–induced droughts.

Nonferrous metals mining is an activity with a substantial potential for environmental degradation, and these various natural hazards have a high potential to adversely interact with mining’s potential for environmental degradation. Earthquakes can destabilize tailings storage facilities, typhoons can flood tailings ponds, and mine-pit dewatering can enhance the competition for groundwater resources during droughts. This study show how natural hazards can amplify the environmental harm prevalent in mining and pose a substantial threat to the livelihoods of archipelago’s poor, who are dependent upon subsistence agriculture and subsistence aquaculture.

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