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Subject:
From:
Ousman Gajigo <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 8 Feb 2003 15:20:59 -0800
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Economic development and environmental protection don't always involve
trade-off but that seems to be the case in the BBC report:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/2724339.stm
Ghana's gold dilemma

By Kwaku Sakyi-Addo
BBC, Accra



The Ghanaian Government is agonising over whether to grant licenses to six
mining companies which are ready to invest over $2bn or preserve the forest
and help save the earth.

Over the past five years, only a handful of new mines have opened as against
dozens in the early to mid 1990s.

Five of the prospective mining companies are interested in mining for gold,
but the ore is located inside forest reserves.

US mining giant Newmont, would, alone, pump close to $500m into the ailing
Ghanaian economy, even before mining starts, and create about 1,000 jobs
directly.

Newmont has found gold in two locations; but one of them falls inside a
forest reserve. The company says it wants both concessions or nothing.

Bauxite too

A sixth company, called Bhp Billiton, an Anglo-Australian firm, wants to
explore for bauxite, the mineral from which aluminium is derived.

Billiton would invest about $1bn to establish an integrated mining and
alumina processing industry.

Since independence, Ghana has been looking desperately for exactly such an
investor to mine and process the prodigious volumes of bauxite which,
minerals experts say, exist at Kyebi in the Eastern Region and Nyinahin in
Ashanti.

But, again, the precious mineral lies buried inside forest reserves.

Currently, there are two companies involved in the bauxite and alumina
processing business: one exports the raw bauxite, the other imports it
semi-processed from Jamaica.

Eco-tourism

Last week, three ministers in charge of mines, forestry, and environment
toured some of the reserves and met the local communities to help government
to take a decision.

The Minerals Commission which regulates mining activities in the country
favours licensing the companies to mine.

One official said small-scale artisans would invade the forest and mine,
anyway, if the big companies, which are easier to identify, regulate,
monitor and tax, are kept out.

Many are poor in Ghana

Many ordinary people in the prospective mining towns, which are desperate
for amenities and secure jobs, also want the mines.

But environmentalists say the forest reserves are too important for the
survival of the earth and should not be tampered with.

Dr Solomon Quartey, a consultant, recommends eco-tourism - where visitors
pay to visit the forest - as a means of creating jobs in the communities.

A billion dollars will not pour in in a hurry, he concedes, but the forest
will not disappear in the near future either.






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