IMPACTS ON THE ECONOMY
Exxon and Rio Algom contend that the Crandon mine would be financially
profitable, provide stable, safe jobs to the local area, and not
adversely affect the local economy either during or after the project.
An examination of the two companies' track records, however, throws
even the economic benefits of their operations into question.
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Project stability
The economic stability of any large-scale project is of foremost
concern to a state or community. No town wants to pin its hopes on a
shaky investment, only for the project to collapse due to high costs
or market fluctuations. However, the larger the corporation, the
more easily it can gamble on high-risk projects. Exxon, in
particular, has a history of using its oil windfall profits to
initiate new megaprojects, only to drop them later. Former Exxon
chairman Clifton Garvin admitted in 1984, "We're not interested in
being in businesses long-term that don't meet the kinds of return
criteria we see in oil and gas." (Kirkland, Fortune, 7/23/84). Exxon
Nuclear Co. suddenly closed its uranium mines that year, after losing
$211 million in less than a decade. Similarly, Exxon Minerals Co.
losses came to $430 million in 1980-85. (Forbes, p. 72, 4/29/85).
Rio Algom has also operated with a large deficit, with its British
Columbia copper-molybdenum holdings keeping its financial head above
water (Moody, Plunder, p. 135).
When Exxon withdrew from the Crandon project in 1986, it cited the low
price of zinc, which at the time was selling for 44 cents a pound.
But when the project was restarted in 1993, the price stood at 44
cents a pound. (Milwaukee Journal, 12/11/86, Wall Street Journal
11/8/93) The Canadian industry newspaper The Northern Miner has
extensively reported on the low price of zinc, due to a "gross
oversupply", and the reduced use of zinc in auto sheeting. It has
cited reports stating that "In the longer term, there are no real
growth markets for zinc....use is forecast to fall" and "Unless zinc
prices collapse (which is not an impossibility) the situation is
nowhere near a resolution" (Northern Miner, 12/12/94, 4/4/94).
These reports do not even take into account the new sources of metals
such as copper and zinc now accessible in the former Soviet Union,
which can only add to the global zinc glut. Due to this oversupply,
Western zinc output fell nine percent in 1993. (Northern Miner,
1/24/94) A huge project based on zinc, a metal in its "worst
situation since the 1930s", is clearly not a stable or reliable
investment (Engineering & Mining Journal, 3/94, p. 19).
Firings of workforce
Exxon invested at least $404 million in the $5 billion oil shale
project in Colorado, only to withdraw in 1982, before the project was
planned to begin. Over 2000 workers found out from news reports that
they were laid off. Other workers who had been promised jobs arrived
to find out that the jobs no longer existed. Even after Exxon's
pullout, outdated job publicity continued to attract a transient
unemployed population, and placed added burdens on social service
agencies just as those services were being cut back. (Gulliford, p.
199).
Two other cases in Nova Scotia point to the riskiness of metallic mine
projects. Exxon's Esso Minerals opened the Gay Mills lead-zinc mine
in 1979, but closed it after only two years due to shaft flooding, and
many workers were laid off. (Canadian Mining Journal, p. 69) Rio
Algom raised CAN$157.5 million in 1982 to acquire the East Kemptville
zinc deposit. Though the mine was projected to run for 17 years,
production halted after only five years when tin prices fell
dramatically. (Gulliver File, 648)
Armando Valbuena Gouriyú, a former employee at Exxon's El Cerrejón
mine in Colombia, testified that the miners resented their treatment
by Exxon. Gouriyú testified that many workers (including himself)
have been laid off due to union organizing efforts - especially when
two-year contracts were being negotiated. A 1990 mineworkers
strike, largely based on working conditions, was declared illegal by
the Colombian government. (Multinational Monitor, 5/90)
Occupational health and safety
Even if a worker has a secure job with Exxon or Rio Algom, it is not
clear to us that the employee's health and safety has been held in
high regard. In 1989, Exxon had the worst mine safety record among
the 20 largest underground mining firms in the U.S.
(Multinational Monitor, 10/90). Gouriyú testified that Exxon's
lobbying actually weakened Colombian worker safety laws. He said of
the mine, "The machinery is very dangerous. Workers lose arms, legs,
fingers, their lives. They breathe coal dust and have nose problems,
allergies, lung problems, silicosis." (Isthmus, 7/8/94). Secretary
General Pedro Galindo of the Federation of Petroleum Workers, which
represents 12,000 Colombian members, said in 1990, "There are serious
problems with the Exxon mine. In the last four years, 32 workers
have died there. We don't know the reason. The worker is normally
working, suddenly he becomes paralyzed and in a few days he dies.
This happens only in the Exxon mine."(Multinational Monitor, 12/90)
Keith Lewis, a former miner at Rio Algom's Elliot Lake uranium mines,
testified that "many of these people paid the price in a tough, rough,
and dangerous business. Fingers and thumbs were lost.....I have
asthma and chronic bronchitis." Lewis also detailed cancers,
respiratory illnesses, and degenerative diseases among members of his
community who worked in the mines in the 1950-70s. His testimony is
backed up by reports from the Ontario Workman's Compensation Board
(1969) and the federal government's Royal Commission on the Health and
Safety of Workers in Mines (1976), showing abnormally high levels of
lung cancers among Elliot Lake workers, from both dust exposure
(silicosis) and radiation. The Ontario Ministry of Health (1972)
reported that these lung cancer death rates exceeded the average
population rate by 300 to 500 percent. (Moody, Plunder, pp. 127-30).
Stability of local economy
A major concern along the Wolf River is the stability of the
tourism-based economy. Rafting, fishing, and other water-based
recreation brings in millions of dollars to the local area, and
benefits the rest of Wisconsin. If pollution from the Crandon mine
damages the river - or even is even perceived as damaging the
watershed - serious economic repercussions would follow for the area
that would more than offset any economic gains from mining. Again,
the track records of Exxon and Rio Algom contain infamous cases of
damages and threatened damages to marine-based economies.
In Nova Scotia, Rio Algom still has not carried out a clean-up of its
East Kemptville mine, and the 300-400 feet of tailings. Water
flowing through the tailings carry heavy metals and toxic chemicals
into the Tusket River, which flows to the Atlantic Ocean. Nova
Scotians for a Clean Environment has "grave concerns about the
multi-million dollar lobster industry situated at the mouth of the
Tusket River if the flow of metals downstream is not stopped." Rio
Algom has said that once the mine is sold, they will not accept any
responsibility for damage at the site. (Parting Company, p. 14).
The 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill devastated the livelihood of
commercial fishermen in the Prince William Sound area and beyond.
Documented lost income for individual plaintiffs in the ensuing suit
against Exxon totalled $2.9 billion, including $166 million directly
from lost salmon and herring fisheries . In 1994, seine (net)
permits cost one-sixth what they did before the disaster five years
before. Local towns lost about half their revenues from taxing the
fish catch (Sound Truth, p. 50).
The spill cancelled the 1989 salmon and herring runs, and runs again
failed in 1992-93 after contaminated offspring matured. The Alaska
Department of Fish and Game stated that "it is probable the extremely
low returns of salmon in 1993 are symptomatic of widespread ecological
damage within Prince William Sound." Government studies of salmon
documented negative effects on egg mortality, emergence, growth, and
escapement, in contradiction to Exxon studies that claimed a
rebounding of the resource. (Sound Truth, pp. 33-35, 76-77)
Officials from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) specifically challenged Exxon's study criteria. (Council on
Economic Priorities, p. 4). The government studies convinced a jury
in 1994 to penalize Exxon for five billion dollars in punitive damages
(New York Times, 9/17/94). It is noteworthy that current Crandon
Mining Co. public relations manager J. Wiley Bragg was brought to
Alaska as a regional representative to help Exxon with public
relations after the Valdez disaster.
Boom and bust
The best-documented economic side effect from mining is the
boom-and-bust effect, whereby local communities gain from income
during a mining operation, but expend their budgets supporting an
increased population, and are left holding the bag after the company
closes operations. These post-operation costs include physical
clean-up (as in Nova Scotia), sudden large-scale unemployment, and an
inability to pay for enlarged school systems and city services.
Several researchers have noted that boomtown residents are more likely
to experience "unusually high levels of life stress, which arise not
only from the amount of change in their lives, but also from the
deficits and frustrations resulting from overworked community
services, family needs and difficulties, and a host of other stressors
produced by the boomtown environment." (Weisz, p. 55).
Exxon operated two coal mines near Gillette, in Wyoming's Powder River
Basin. One mental health expert noted that during the 1974-78 boom
period, the town had a 101% increase in admissions to a local mental
health center, and a 610% increase of Campbell County resident
admissions to the state mental hospital, while the county's population
increased 62%. (Weisz, p. 55).
After Exxon pulled out of the Colony oil shale project in Colorado, a
shopping center developer sued for $58 million on the grounds that
Exxon misled it to believe the project was going ahead . The town of
Parachute had to mothball its half-million dollar water treatment
plant because it was no longer needed (Daily Sentinel, 8/8/82,
5/1/83). The miles of new roads built in anticipation of the boom
now require regular maintenance, but funds have been severely reduced.
There were 1600 foreclosures in 1985 alone, and high unemployment led
to depression, loss of self-esteem, spouse and child abuse, and
suicide (Gulliford, p. 199) "I've learned one thing from this," said
County Commissioner Jim Drinkhouse, "the next corporation that comes
into Garfield County will not only pay to come in - they will pay to
leave." (Daily Sentinel, 5/5/82).
Gouriyú testified about the El Cerrejón operation, "It took 4000
workers to build the mine. Two years later, they were laid
off....Ten years later, the problems from the transformation of the
economy has created unemployment, violence, prostitution, and a black
market." Keith Lewis similarly testified that at Elliot Lake, mining
companies had "little qualm about leaving behind environmental
degradation and social disruption - the boom-and-bust cycle....The town
of Elliot Lake had up to 20,000 at one point in 1960, it dwindled to
3000-4000......In terms of the unemployment rate, it stayed the same.
Even after the two companies came and there was this incredible boom
period where money is being injected into all sorts of places (except
to the Indian and local populations)...the dynamic that followed was
that miner and skilled technicians and whatever was required in terms
of running these operations came with them."
Diné (Navajo) tribal member Ester Yazzie testified on the side effects
of uranium leasing in the Southwest, "Our people do not understand the
corporation language...They don't understand why a corporation wants
these raw resources. They know it's dangerous. All we know is that
we are pressured by economic development, to earn money... Because we
were never educated about it, today we're still struggling with the
hazards of it."
Areas of concern
While North American mining companies have started to address the
economic instability caused by some large-scale mining projects, Exxon
and Rio Algom appear to lag behind. The economic promises of mining
are not only called into question by potential environmental damage,
but by potential negative impacts to local economies even if the mine
is 100 percent clean. These negative impacts have occurred during the
operations, but especially after a company pull-out.
It also appears contradictory for a firm to express an interest in
boosting local employment, when it has exhibited a lack of concern for
its own workforce, or for the previous economic base of local
communities.
Finally, unstable market prices seem to make any zinc mine a real
economic gamble at this time. The huge zinc reserves in the U.S.
appear to contradict the claim that our country needs new metallic
mines in order to prosper. A more solid investment could perhaps be
found in metallic recycling, which cuts waste instead of creating it.
Northern Wisconsin needs a serious dialogue about similar economic
options that can promote a stable growth in jobs.
References
Stephen N. Branch, "Esso's Gays River Mine Newest Nova Scotia
Lead-Zinc Producer" (Canadian Mining Journal, Apr.1980)
James Cook, "Exxon proves that big doesn't mean rigid,"
Council on Economic Priorities, "America's Least Wanted: The
1993 Campaign for Cleaner Corporations," N.Y., Nov./Dec. 1993.
Daily Sentinel, (Grand Junction, Colorado)
Engineering & Mining Journal, "Zinc: Major Mine Production
Cuts in 1993", March 1994.
Andrew Gulliford, Boomtown Blues: Colorado Oil Shale, 1885-1985.
University Press of Colorado, 1989.
Isthmus newsweekly (Madison), "Minding the Mine: Inter-
view with Armando Valbuena Gouriyú", July 8-14, 1994.
Richard I. Kirkland Jr., "Exxon rededicates itself to oil,"
Roger Moody, The Gulliver File: Mines, People, and the Land:
(London: Minewatch, 1992).
Roger Moody, Plunder! (London: PARTiZANS/CAFCA, 1991).
Multinational Monitor, "Exxon Kills the Canary," October 1990
Multinational Monitor, "Cartel Politics in Colombia: An Inter-
view with Pedro Galindo", December 1990.
Northern Miner, "Car design and metals", December 12, 1994.
Northern Miner, "A near-hopeless zinc situation", April 4, 1994.
Northern Miner, "Post-Cold War blues", Jan. 24, 1994.
Riki Ott, Ph.D., Sound Truth: Exxon's Manipulation of Science
and the Significance of the Exxon Valdez Spill (Anchorage
Greenpeace, March 24, 1994).
Parting Company, "RTZ Plays Pilate," London, Winter 1993.
Keith Schneider, "Exxon is Ordered to Pay $5 Billion for Alaska Spill", New York Times, September 17, 1994.
Steve Schultze, "Exxon shelves mining plan," Milwaukee Journal,
Wall Street Journal, "Cash prices in metals", November 8, 1993.
Robert Weissman, "Exxon crushes Colombian strike," Multinational
(May 1990).
Robert Weisz, "Coping with the Stresses of a Boom: Mental Health Alternatives for Impacted Communities," in Joseph & Judith
Ann Davenport (eds.) The Boom Town: Problems and Promises
in the Energy Vortex. Laramie: University of Wyoming, 1980.

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