World Bank halts funding for massive Romanian mine.

AuthorTaylor, David
PositionEnvironmental Intelligence

The World Bank on October 10 halted loan negotiations with Canadian mining company Gabriel Resources, which is hoping to raise capital to take over and expand an existing state-run mine in Romania. In a highly unusual move, World Bank President James Wolfensohn directed the International Finance Corporation (IFC), the bank's private lending arm, to drop the loan application.

Wolfensohn made his decision after a discussion with two environmental activists, representing Romanian NGOs, during the Bank's annual meetings in September. The dialogue prompted the bank president to intervene in the preliminary discussions between the company and the IFC.

The $100 million loan would have helped Gabriel begin developing the open pit gold and silver mine at Rosia Montana, located in the mountains of western Transylvania. Over the past two years the company has raised $90 million for the mine, which is expected to cost $400 million over its lifetime. The proposed 2,500 hectare mine would operate for 16 years and extract an estimated 300,000 kilograms of gold and 1,600,000 kilograms of silver.

Romanian environmentalists are concerned that the mine, which would use cyanide to extract gold from the ores, could seriously pollute the region's waterways. And they point to past examples of weak governmental oversight to prevent mining spills: in 2000, a cyanide tailings dam split at a mine in Bala Mare, Romania, polluting the Tisza and Danube Rivers. The incident killed 1,200 tons of fish and polluted the water for 2.5 million people.

The mine would also require the relocation of more than 2,200 people. Gabriel began offering cash buyouts to homeowners to voluntarily relocate as early as June 2002, paying about $35,000 per home. "That's 30 years of work," said Simon Lawrence, Gabriel's vice president of development. "$100 a month is the average wage for Romanians. This is a very good opportunity to sell a property that has very little value to them." Since the World Bank halted loan negotiations, however, buyouts have been postponed.

Romania is one of the poorest countries in Central and Eastern Europe, and the government is trying to privatize its mining industry as a shot in the arm for its domestic economy and to...

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