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Let’s say you woke up tomorrow to the sound of someone knocking at your door. And, when you answer, the person standing outside politely explained that they were a representative of an energy company that had recently acquired the rights to extract the natural gas in the area. Oh, and a great deal of that resource happens to be located under your house. Or, what if you were able to track changes in the water your community uses for drinking, cooking, bathing and cleaning physically change over the past few years – from a pure, clean resource, to one that is smelly, polluted or fouled in some other way. And that those changes began when a mining operation started upstream. Now here’s the kicker – you are unable to bring a complaint against thees resource extraction companies simply because you lack the time, money or other resources. Or, an even more likely scenario, if and when you do bring your issues to your local or national authorities, you find that the scales are tipped against you simply because the companies have access to seemingly unlimited amounts of time, money and insider knowledge. My guest for the 147th Terms of Reference Podcast, Flaviano Bianchini, is intimately familiar with stories similar to these from around the world. But rather than just listen, he has helped create a powerful solution that has helped communities to fight back and tip the scales in their favor. Flaviano’s organization, Source International, helps communities that are adversely affected by resource extraction activities, like mining or well drilling, by providing them with scientific and legal resources. As you’ll hear us discuss, the support provided by Source has created profound results – large-scale monetary rewards, injunctions against extraction activities and, in one case, completely rewriting mining laws. You can connect with Flaviano here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/flavianobianchini www.source-international.org/staff/?lang=en Tweets by bianco222
IN TOR 147 YOU’LL LEARN ABOUT
- Source International, an initiative to empower communities stricken by negative environmental impacts, through scientific evidence and methods with legal validity against oil and mining companies, or even governments
- How technology Sources Uses for sampling and analyzing “almost everything”, from water to hair and food, is parts centuries-old and parts cutting-edge innovation
- The fatal perils of fighting oil and mining. As tragic as the case of Berta Cáceres was in Central America, even more tragic is the customary recurrence of this cases in America, Africa, Asia
- The few but vital successes, including multi-million compensation to Mexican communities, and even a struck-down law by Honduras Supreme Court
- Source International’s process to decide when to intervene, and the inevitable reality of not being able to help everyone
- Why the XIX century Gold Rush has the US paying astronomical sums each year to fix acidification of water that cannot even be used in hydroelectric turbines. Researching pollution is also corporate risk management
OUR CONVERSATION FEATURES THE FOLLOWING
Names
- Source International
- Dakota Access Pipeline
- Berta Cáceres
- Ashoka, Fellows
- Ashoka Globalizer
- US Geological Survey (USGS)
- E-Tech International
- Environmental Law Alliance Worldwide
- Global Witness
Topics
- Oil & Mining, mining companies
- Intimidation of local leaders
- Native Americans, US recognition of rights
- Lab work, sampling, analysis
- Water pollution and acidity, US river contamination by the US Gold Rush era,
- Environmental law, scientific evidence as recourse for legal defense
Places
- Italy
- Mexico
- Guatemala
- Honduras
- Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Mongolia
- Cerro de Pasco, Peru
- El Salvador
- Colorado
- Oregon
EPISODE CRIB NOTES
Source International
00:03:23,610- our final goal is to change the way in which minerals natural resources are extracted all over the world
- we equip communities with scientific and legal tools that they can use for control their environment and their resources
- so that they can have some sort of leveraging that in use to hold buying companies accountable
- we basically do two different things
- #1 we perform scientific studies for communities
- mining companies and governments can access to the best studies, the best scientists, the best lawyers
- local communities often cannot
- we try to balance this, bringing science legal advice
- #2 we train local communities
- indigenous leader groups and local farmers to perform some basic monitoring system
- we teach them how to use science in order to hold companies accountable
- we can sort of transform the community into a sort of watchdog
Intimidation?
00:05:36,759- back in 2006-7 in Guatemala
- it happened again in Mexico a few years ago in the state of Guerrero
- it still happens today
- one year ago they killed Berta Cáceres in Honduras
- so yeah it happens sometimes
- who is really at risk is more our local partners and local communities
- most of our organization is from Europe or the US
- it’s sad but it’s a sort of protection
- it depends a lot from countries to countries
- sometimes is the company, sometimes the government sometimes local armed groups not linked directly to either
- in Mexico, some areas are very dangerous and we call them drug cartels
- but often those operate in mining rich area
- drug is just one of their deal
- in the Democratic Republic of Congo where you have those army group that basically finance themselves with smuggling of minerals used for technology
- Mongolia, where you have the government that has put into jail one of the biggest activists of the country with an accusation of terrorism
- it was just manifestation against a mining process
- but generally speaking, local communities are in danger for two different sides
- #1 one side is the danger of the impact that those extractive projects can have on their health, on their environment on their life
- #2 and if they protest against them they are in danger
- on the Dakota Access Pipeline: that’s a sort of typical case
- is in a developed country a country that is supposed to have a functional and fair judicial system
- but it also does not recognize the indigenous rights and indigenous communities
- the protest against the project has been criminalized for quite a while
- that was quite famous because it’s in the US, the land of the free, free speech, freedom of protest
- but you have hundreds of stories like this in Latin America and Africa in Asia
- so it’s just one of those hundreds of cases
Among this many cases, any measure of success?
00:09:53,679- we’ve been able to have 50 million dollar in compensation for an indigenous community in Mexico
- for the use of land and the pollution of the water
- the community can afford to bring a new pipeline for the water
- we also have obtained the declaration of emergency in a city in Peru called Cerro de Pasco
- probably our biggest achievement, at the Supreme Court of Honduras
- it declared unconstitutional 13 articles of the mining law because it violates human rights to health
- after that the Parliament was obliged to issue a new law that is more respectful for health for human rights
- it took years and years of work or was that just so obvious
- “I mean it affected the entire population of Honduras”
Source us through
00:11:51,880- we never reach a community first
- we always ask for the community to call us
- I mean if we go to a community and we impose ourselves, wouldn’t it be another way of colonialism
- we always need a call from the community
- we receive of course a lot more calls than what we can afford
- we have to select
- we have to do a sort of triage of the projects
- these are resource poor communities
- in areas of the world that are usually remote
- we have at this moment 27 projects, 26 of them just by word of mouth
- one community reached through internet
- it’s a good indicator for us
- we select basically on three four major points:
- #1 how big is the problem
- #2 the resources that we have
- #3 the strength of the local communities, that’s fundamental
- if the local community is not strong enough in term of self-organization…
- we start to ask to other communities that we know, and because they know us too they are “warmer to us”
- we ask for feedback to someone or other organization
- we have a strong network with local organizations in all the countries where we work
- so we can ask organizations
- we can provide them science and legal advice but they must go through the process, deal with the company
- we cannot do it for them
- the next step is going and start to work
- we visit and we stay for a while, normally three weeks
- where we do a sort of initial assessment
- then we define a strategy, it can be one year long or three years long
- we start with collecting and analyzing samples
- we teach the methodology of monitoring
- then start to report
- we can do pretty much everything, from water quality & quantity, soil, dust
- we also do biological samples: blood, urine, hair analysis
- accumulation of heavy metals or dioxins
- we analyze food sometimes
Sample and analyze your next five years
00:17:23,349- that’s a sensitive question because we don’t have real strategies
- we go with the flow and try to navigate a little and see what happens
- but we need to actually define a strategy
- we just started with Ashoka Globalizer
- that will help us in define a strategy for the next five years
- you have to follow the flow but somehow you have to navigate into this flow too
Source?
00:18:53,559- 11 years ago I was in Italy in a conference
- she had this fairly emotional speech on the mining pollution in her country
- I proposed to help them providing scientific data and she said yes
- a couple of months later I was on a one-way ticket to Guatemala
- I spent almost one year taking evidence about mining pollution in Central America
- from there I started to do other projects
- then I moved to Peru and Argentina and so on
- six years later I started to develop the idea of having an organization
- I’m an Ashoka fellow, that was what enabled me to actually found Source International
Innovation in sampling and analyzing
00:21:14,450- generally speaking, it remains the same
- when you work in in your lab at Berkeley University or whatever
- you can use the most innovative technology
- when you are in the middle of the jungle in Peru it’s not as easy
- at the end of the day we use technologies that are 30 years old
- simple but pretty effective and officially recognized
- taking water and solid samples
- the only thing that we have changed a little bit are two:
- #1 on biological samples we used to analyze a lot of blood, and now we are switching to hair
- because it’s easier from the bureaucratic and legal point of view
- especially when you have to move blood across frontiers
- #2 work with other smaller NGOs investigation center
- to develop rapid screen analysis toolkits of heavy metals in water
- the technology is probably a hundred years old
- you can have sort of machine with a laser that measure the intensity of blue with Precision
- it will take probably a couple of years more but there are already some system
Sources International of funding?
00:24:23,260- we have different revenue streams: grants and donations from foundations
- sometimes we have local communities who pay for us
- communities are often intermediaries with local NGOs
- we cannot take money from a mining or oil company because it would be a conflict of interest
- it’s pretty difficult to let them companies understand that the work is really risk prevention, not just something for human rights or environment
- with a mining company you can earn money on the short-term but then if they let everything polluted you will lose more money that would you at the beginning
- the clear example is the state of Colorado
- (Stephen’s Birthplace)
- CO is losing 17 million dollar a year just for the pollution that was caused 150 years ago
- when they were looking for gold
- acid mine drainage
- water cannot be used for anything: fishing, drinking, industrial
- it’s so acid that you cannot put that water into a turbine to generate electricity for
- in the entire US it’s much more
- 22,000 kilometers of rivers in the US polluted
Have you ever said, ‘actually, you guys don’t have it so bad, it’ll be fine’?
00:29:01,440- when they call us it’s always is when there is really a problem
- when we arrive there is usually a damaged situation
- we are pretty unique on this use of science and law
- the real innovation is the fact that we use the science in order to educate legal processes
- in New Mexico, E-Tch are doing something similar
- but they’re closer to the companies. We are a hundred percent working only with communities
Flaviano plugs stuff from the Earth
00:31:26,080- Oregon’s Environmental Law Alliance Worldwide
- UK’s Global Witness
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