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Article

27 Mar 2024

Author:
The Andrew Lees Trust (Royaume-Uni)

New analyses of water quality and radiation studies on the Rio Tinto/QMM mine in Madagascar

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Following the public release of the QMM Water Report 2021-2023 and the 2023 JBS&G radiation report, the Andrew Lees Trust (ALT UK) requested independent hydrology and radioactivity experts to review the studies and their findings.

The experts’ analyses have now been published by ALT UK and show that ongoing vigilance and caution are necessary with regard to water quality and radiation exposure – especially for the most vulnerable groups, around Rio Tinto’s QMM mineral sands operation in southern Madagascar...

Nothing in the 2023 QMM or JBS&G reports have been found to confirm or assure that the mining company yet has the QMM contamination and water quality management issues under control, or support its claims. This is signified, in part, through data quality problems and study limitations that are explained, in summary, in our latest March 2024 Briefing, together with ongoing transparency challenges (eg Rio Tinto/QMM’s withholding of relevant studies)...

Water quality around QMM has been a concern for local communities for many years, including in relation to livelihood losses and health, and consequently at the root of multiple protests and conflict in the region. The conflicts have given rise to wider human rights violations and concerns around the Rio Tinto/QMM mine.

ALT UK with Publish What You Pay Madagascar continue to press Rio Tinto, the parent company of QMM, for an independent water impact assessment that could offer a neutral and inclusive process (for communities and stakeholders) and provide the basis for improved transparency around QMM water quality, help build informed consensus, resolve and remediate issues, and thereby promote greater stability in the region.

The Trust is also collaborating with other civil society actors who are raising issues about water quality and water governance around Rio Tinto mines in other locations, both for proposed, existing and legacy mine sites. They are all, alongside the company’s investors, pressing Rio Tinto for a commitment to independent water impact assessments and for appropriate remedial actions identified through such processes.

A recent article about Rio Tinto’s aluminium facilities in Canada exposes a whistleblower’s insights about the company’s alarming behaviour in relation to water management, and highlights the need for increased transparency and governance around water at Rio Tinto operations around the world – and around all mining operations globally. Water is life!...

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