• home
  • | about
  • | comment/feedback
  • | site map
  • | login/register 
  •  
  • LandKeepers - A First Nations Community Forum on BC mining issues

  • Mining
  • |  Pipelines
  • |  news
  • |  directory
  • |  calendar
  • |  photos
  • |  wiki
    •  » Mining News
    •  » Mining Fact Sheets
    •  » Mining Maps
    •  » Mining Reports
    •  » Mining Videos
    •  » Mining Web Links
    •  » Media Releases
    •  » News Articles
    •  » Mining News
    •  » Pipeline News
    •  » Pipeline News
    •  » Pipeline Fact Sheets
    •  » Pipeline Maps
    •  » Pipeline Reports
    •  » Pipeline Videos
    •  » Pipeline Web Links

     

    LandKeepers News Archive

    Norwegian Pension Fund Excludes Barrick Gold on Ethical Grounds

    February 11 2009 | Media Releases

    Norwegian Pension Fund Excludes Barrick Gold on Ethical Grounds

    (Ottawa, February 11, 2009) Norway’s Government Pension Fund has dropped its shares in Canada’s Barrick Gold as a result of Barrick’s operations at the Porgera Mine in Papua New Guinea. Based on an in-depth assessment of Barrick’s operations in Porgera, the pension fund’s Council of Ethics concluded that investment in Barrick amounted to “an unacceptable risk of the Fund contributing to serious environmental damage.” The Council added that “the company’s assertions that its operations do not cause long-term and irreversible environmental damage carry little credibility. This is reinforced by the lack of openness and transparency in the company’s environmental reporting.”

    Barrick Gold has a 95% stake in the Porgera Joint Venture. The Government Pension Fund had owned more than $229 million (Canadian) in Barrick shares.

    MiningWatch Canada has documented and reported on the unacceptable environmental and social impacts of the Porgera Mine since 2000, when MiningWatch staff first visited the project. A return visit in November 2008 confirmed that Barrick has made no progress in alleviating the egregious impacts of the mine. MiningWatch’s findings helped to inform the Council of Ethics.

    In May of 2008, indigenous Ipili leader Jethro Tulin spoke out at Barrick’s Annual General meeting in Toronto, saying, “Your mine has destroyed our ancestral land, our sacred places, and our gardens, which we need to feed ourselves. You dump your mine waste directly into our river system contaminating 600 km of river all the way to the sea. You do this, even though you know that it is illegal to dump your waste into rivers in Canada.”

    “MiningWatch Canada applauds the ethical decision taken by the Norwegian Government Pension Fund to exclude Barrick Gold,” says Catherine Coumans of MiningWatch Canada.

    “We urge the Canadian Pension Plan, Canadian investors, and socially responsible investment companies that hold Barrick shares to similarly reconsider their financial support for this company.”

    Contact:

    Catherine Coumans, Research Coordinator (613) 569-3439 or

    For more information on concerns regarding the Porgera Mine see:
    http://www.miningwatch.ca/index.php?/Papua_New_Guinea

    For a copy of the Council of Ethics Report on Barrick Gold see:
    http://www.regjeringen.no/upload/FIN/etikk/recommendation_barrick.pdf

    This Entry is Not Tagged. Click here to Add Tags

    In this Section

    • Media Releases
    • News Articles
    • Mining News
    • Pipeline News

    Tag Cloud

    pipeline environmental assessment taseko mines prosperity mine teztan biny tsilhqotin terrane metals fish lake environmental impacts mt. milligan aboriginal rights ceaa nakazdli first nations mining

    Coming Events

    Fighting for Lakes, Water & Rights Panel: presentation on defending Teztan Biny (Fish Lake)
    Thursday, May 27 | Vancouver, BC
    Premiere of “Blue Gold: The Tsilhqot’in Fight for Teztan Biny (Fish Lake) Documentary
    Thursday, Mar 11 | Victoria, BC
    + View all events

    Map: BC's Mining Hotspots

     
    © LandKeepers, 2008
    Resources | Forums | News | Directory | Calendar | Photos | About | Comment/Feedback | Site Map | Search | Login/Register
    Powered by Expression Engine | Site Credits