Gold and Silver

Opposition to Canadian miner’s planned gold mine in Turkey mounts

Opposition to Canadian miner’s planned gold mine in Turkey mounts
Mining News Pro - Canada’s Alamos Gold (TSX, NYSE: AGI) is facing growing opposition to its Kirazli project, located in a forested region near Mount Ida, western Turkey, after complaints of massive deforestation allegedly caused by the company and its planned use of cyanide flooded Turkish social media early this month.
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More than 5,000 people, including opposition lawmakers, staged a peaceful protest on August 5, on news that Alamos Gold’s local subsidiary, Dogu Biga Mining, had cut down 197,000 trees at the site, almost four times the number of trees allowed by the government.

Both Turkish officials and the company dispute the figure, adding that the Canadian miner has paid for future reforestation of the site in advance.

The country’s authorities had allowed the clear-cut of roughly 45,000 trees, but reduced that number considerably after consulting a July study. The Turkish Foundation for Combating Soil Erosion (TEMA), however, recently published images obtained with the help of satellite showing what it is supposed to be evidence of massive deforestation around the mine site.

“As part of the forestry permit, we have paid about $5 million [and] a big component of that fee is to pay for reforestation,” Alamos’ chief executive, John McCluskey, said earlier this month.

He noted that only governmental bodies were allowed to cut trees, not companies.

Activists say the clear-cutting threatens the region’s plant and animal species, some of which are only found in Mount Ida, or the Kaz Mountains, as the area is known locally. They also object to the company’s planned use of cyanide at the site, warning that a leak would have a devastating environmental impact on the area and contaminate local fresh water supplies.

The company says that while cyanide will be used on site, it will only be added in the final step of the extraction process, adding that it has taken measures to ensure there would be no impact in the area.

Ali Furkan Oğuz, a Turkish lawyer specializing in environmental cases, told Canada’s The Globe and Mail newspaper that Turkey’s system of environmental impact reports was not up to global standards. “Companies give money to consultancy agencies and ask them to prepare a report, and afterwards the government approves it,” he said.

When built, the Kirazli gold mine is expected to produce an average of 104,000 ounces at all-in sustaining costs of $373 per ounce over a five-year mine life.

In addition to the mine in Kirazli, the Toronto-based miner has two more gold and silver mining projects under development in nearby Agi Dagi and Camyurt. It also runs operating mines in Canada (Young-Davidson and Island Gold in northern Ontario), and in Mexico (Mulatos and El Chanate, both in Sonora state).

Turkey has a storied history of environmentalist protest, with green activists being a key element in the 2013 protests against the construction of Gezi Park that swept the country and prompted a violent security crackdown.


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