Russia launches pollution investigation after streams run orange.
Acidic runoff from abandoned Urals mine puts spotlight on hazardous industrial waste.
Russian prosecutors are inspecting a facility supposed to treat acid runoff from an abandoned Urals mine after videos emerged of streams running orange.
Drone footage uploaded last week by an Instagram travel blogger showed a bright-orange landscape near the disused copper-sulphide mine close to the village of Lyovikha.
“The Nizhny Tagil district prosecutors office has begun to check the facility treating the waste waters from Levikhinsky mine,” a spokeswoman, Marina Kanatova, told Agence France-Presse on Wednesday.
The mine “is flooded and now acid rivers flow from it, poisoning everything they touch”, the blogger zamkad_life wrote to describe the series of images which have since gone viral. Videos on his account show the orange-coloured streams fanning out over the forested landscape.
The prosecutors’ spokeswoman said specialists would “take samples to establish whether the treatment of the acidic water from the mine complies with the rules”.
The environmentalist Andrei Volegov, who chairs a local non-governmental organisation, Ecopravo, said on Facebook that the polluted water was supposed to be neutralised in a technical “pond” which overflowed during heavy rains.
Volegov alerted prosecutors to the situation last year and received a reply that the company in charge of the pollutants was not properly funded and could not buy enough lime to neutralise the acid, according to a letter he published.
According to local media, the Sverdlovsk regional government asked for the mine to be sealed but Moscow refused on the grounds that there were still valuable resources there.
A major spill of fuel oil in the Arctic last month raised the profile of industrial pollution in Russia, where companies are often punished with only small fines and hazardous waste can be left unaddressed for years due to bureaucracy.
16 July 2020
The Guardian