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Article

18 Mar 2019

Author:
Environmental Defenders Office New South Wales

Historic defeat for bauxite mine in Solomon Islands

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26 March 2019

The Solomon Islands Environment Advisory Committee (EAC) has revoked a development consent for a bauxite mine on Wagina island, in a ground-breaking decision following the first-ever merits appeal hearing in Solomon Islands.

...The proposed mine covering 60% of the small island of Wagina would have had tremendous environmental impacts on water quality, air quality, the ecology and marine environment. It would also have had dramatic and likely irreversible impacts on the more than 2000 residents who rely on the sea and land for their livelihoods.

The EAC decision to revoke the development consent was based on these grounds:

  • legislative procedures for public consultation and publication of the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) were not followed;
  • the EIS did not meet legislative and regulatory requirements;
  • the decision to issue a development consent is inconsistent with the Convention on Biological Diversity and the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples; and
  • the unacceptable impacts to the environment, to the residents of Wagina and their livelihoods and on nearby islands and marine environment.

...The decision represents a win for the people of Wagina and for the environment of Solomon Islands, as well as demonstrating the importance of an independent legal appeals process and the building of environmental law capacity in the Pacific region with the support of the EDO NSW International Program.

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