Brazil’s Minas Gerais State Fines Samarco $30 Million Over Tailings Dam Burst

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Brazil’s Minas Gerais State Fines Samarco $30 Million Over Tailings Dam Burst

Brazilian mining company Samarco said Thursday it had been ordered by Minas Gerais state to pay a 112 million reais ($30 million) fine for environmental damage caused by the bursting of one of its tailings dams

The rupture of the dam on Nov. 5 at the company's Germano open-pit iron ore complex triggered an avalanche of 62 million cubic meters (2.2 billion cubic feet) of mud and toxic iron ore waste, according to the company, a joint venture of Brazilian mining giant Vale and Anglo-Australian mining titan BHP Billiton.

The sludge has spread to numerous municipalities in Minas Gerais and neighboring Espirito Santo and contaminated the Rio Doce, a major waterway in southeastern Brazil, thus severely affecting regional water supplies and causing incalculable damage to the river's fauna.

Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff on Tuesday announced a series of measures to recover the riverine ecosystem, including a plan to "revitalize" the Rio Doce and recover species of flora and fauna.

Environment Minister Izabella Teixeira says it will take at least a decade to achieve the river's full recovery.

Last Friday, a court in Minas Gerais ordered 300 million reais (some $78 million) of Samarco's funds frozen to ensure payment of compensation to those affected by the disaster, which Brazil's government has described as the worst dam rupture globally over the past decade.

Source: Latino Fox News

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