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19 January 2016
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-35340528
What is bauxite?
It is used mostly to make aluminium but other uses include making sandpaper,
polishing powders, and in hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking", gas and oil from shale rock.
There are plentiful reserves of it, which should allow hundreds of years' more use even
before recycling is taken into account.
Malaysia has a long history of mining, especially tin, but until very recently it scarcely
registered on global markets as a source of bauxite. That changed suddenly in January 2014,
when, in an attempt to boost its own aluminium-smelting industry, Indonesia banned exports
of bauxite ore.
Up to that point Indonesia had been China's major supplier.
Several Indonesian mining companies then started looking at the hills above Kuantan, where
the plentiful bauxite was of a lower quality than that available in Indonesia and Australia.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-35340528
Image captionFleets of lorries have been abandoned as the ban on mining takes hold
'Mad rush'
Much of the land in Pahang province has been redistributed to settlers so they could cultivate
it with rubber, palm oil or fruit orchards. So all the companies had to do was approach
smallholders whose properties contained bauxite, and offer them substantial sums of money
to allow their land to be mined.
Most of the plots were quite small, allowing the companies to exploit a loophole in Malaysian
law, which only requires an environmental impact assessment for plots larger than 250
hectares.
The little country roads winding through the hills were suddenly clogged with huge lorries
carrying the ore to the port in Kuantan. The rivers ran red with bauxite sediment, staining the
sea as they flowed out. Some of the mines had licences; many did not.
"It became a whole mad rush," says the opposition member of parliament for Kuantan, Fuziah
Salleh. "There were 44 companies with export licences, and they were all rushing to get as
much as they could get from anybody who was willing to sell their raw ore.
"The greed, the need, of certain people, outweighed welfare of the common people and the
authorities allowed it. And I think there is a lesson to be learned."
Image captionOpposition politician Fuziah Salleh, seen here with her constituents, says there
was a "mad rush" for bauxite ore
The lesson has perhaps been learned. The federal government has ordered a halt to all mining
while it rethinks the regulation of the industry. Seven people have been detained on suspicion
of corruption. But the damage to the environment and future health risks remain unknown,
and worrying.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-35340528
I watched a team from the Malaysia Nature Society (MNS) taking samples from the Sagu
River, at the point where water is pumped out for Kuantan's domestic supply.
They collected bottles of water and trays of alluvial mud, and analysed them to detect the
presence of heavy metals, arsenic and mercury, which typically exist in bauxite sediment.
Government officials are already doing similar tests, but the failure to regulate the bauxite
industry has damaged public trust in its efforts; the MNS volunteers said they wanted to do
the tests themselves to ascertain how badly polluted the water supply is.
Marine scientists have also warned of possible catastrophic damage to the ecosystem off the
coast of Pahang.
Image captionVolunteers test water pollution near mines, instead of trusting government
readings
The official who ultimately bears responsibility for what has happened in Pahang is the state's
Chief Minister Adnan Yaacob. A veteran politician from the ruling UMNO party, he has been in
the job for 16 years, and under Malaysia's federal system chief ministers wield a lot of power.
He turned down the BBC's request for an interview. But he has since acknowledged that the
state government failed to control bauxite mining, and that he had not sought central
government help because he believed he could handle the situation locally.
Demanding compensation
Che Long bin Che Ali is one of the residents in the bauxite zone who refused to lease out his
land, where he cultivates fruit trees. He worries about the impact on the health of future
generations.
But his house is right next to one of the roads used by the ore lorries; everything inside and
outside his home was covered by a thick film of red dust, and the trees started to die.
He began stopping the lorries and demanding compensation payments from them.
He took me to what had been a durian orchard a few hundred metres down the road. The
home of the orchard-owner now lies abandoned and propped up on a high slab of red-brown
earth.
All around, the excavators have dug out a desolate moonscape of earth piles and gaping
holes.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-35340528
Image captionChe Long bin Che Ali on the site of what used to be a durian orchard but that
has now been dug apart by excavators
"This has not helped us," he told me.
"I am not angry with the bauxite industry. I know it brings income for the government, but it
must follow proper regulations. Don't pollute our roads, don't pollute the rivers.
"A handful of people enjoy the profits, but in future many people could suffer."
As the three-month moratorium took hold, fleets of lorries were left idle in jungle clearings,
next to stockpiles of ore that have not yet been exported.
Once the moratorium expires, it is not clear what will happen. Many residents want mining to
be banned permanently. The state is thought to have only 10 years of bauxite reserves left.
Perhaps just a few hundred settlers got rich from the bauxite boom, and a few dozen wellconnected companies. The state collected a 5% royalty on exports, but opposition politicians
argue the federal government could have imposed a 10% duty, but did not do so.
Whatever the benefits were, they do not appear to justify the enormous environmental
damage that has been done.
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