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Air and Water Pollution Conflict in La Guajira, Colombia

In 1976, a contract was signed to allow the extraction of coal in Colombia’s Atlantic region. For nearly 40 years, conflicts have persisted between the companies involved in the contract and the Wayuú indigenous people, who have denounced, above all, the disappearance and contamination of their water sources.

Conceptual Model

Climate ChangeEnvironmental ChangeFragility and Conflict RisksIntermediary MechanismsPollution reduces available/usable freshwater. Freshwater becomes scarce as an essential resource.Changes in land use lead to migration/displacements.Pollution creates public health risks.Migration leads to conflicts between migrants and residents.Reduced availability of/access to natural resources leads to distributive conflicts between societal groups.Public health risks cause growing discontent with the state.A, change in the usage of environmentally relevant land.Land Use ChangePollution, and degradation of ecosystems, such as coral reefs.Pollution / Environmental DegradationAn increase in the scarcity of clean water and/or an increased variability in water supply.Increased Water ScarcityReduced availability of essential natural resources, such as land and water.Change in Access / Availability of Natural Resources(In)voluntary long and short-term movements of people within or across state boundaries.Displacements / MigrationRisks to the health of the population.Public Health RisksNon-violent or violent tensions and conflicts between different societal groups.Grievances between Societal GroupsChallenge to the state's legitimacy, ranging from peaceful protest to violent attempts at overthrowing the government.Anti-State Grievances

Conflict history

The Cerrejón mine is located in the northwest of Colombia’s Atlantic region, in the Guajira department. The Guajira department hosts the country’s largest indigenous group, the Wayuú people, which comprises 20% of the nation’s total indigenous population. In the mid-1970s, a 33-year association contract was signed between Carbones de Colombia S.A. (Carbocol) and Intercol, an affiliate of the US company Exxon Mobil. The contract consisted of three phases: extraction (1977-1980), construction (1981-1986) and production (1986-2009).

Cerrejón operation

In 1999, an agreement was signed to extend the last phase for another 25 years, to the year 2034. Then, in 2000, under the government’s privatization policy, Colombia sold the Carbocol Company to the Billiton Plc UK mining group, South African Anglo American Plc and Swiss Glencore International AG; these companies comprise the Cerrejón North Zone consortium. After the contract was signed, necessary preparations, such as the conduction of studies and the completion of construction, were carried out to allow for the mining to begin. Among the works constructed during this time were a 150-km railway through the entire Wayuu territory, and Puerto Bolívar, Latin America’s foremost coal harbour. Today, the Cerrejón Company is one of Colombia’s largest companies and a major driver of the nation’s economy.

Environmental damages

According to the Hemera Foundation (2008), one of the most serious environmental problems caused by coal mining is the release of particulate matter into the atmosphere. These emissions expose the public to different contaminants, which can lead to respiratory diseases. The same study also reports and highlights water pollution produced by mining activities. According to Urrea and Calvo (2014), the worst water-related effects include the disappearance of aquifers and the contamination of the aquifers that remain. If this were to occur, there would be an alarming shortage of water supply for local communities. The same study also notes that rivers have been deviated to use water in the mine. These are actions which will seriously jeopardize communities’ survival in the future. Currently, the Cerrejón Company has a project pending to deviate the Ranchería River, the region’s main river.

Socio-cultural consequences

Further mining activities have affected the socio-cultural fabric of the communities through the eviction and resettlement of nearby populations and the destruction of numerous cemeteries, which have significant cultural and spiritual value for the Wayuú people. Throughout this all, there has been no free, well-informed prior consultation with communities about the company’s actions (Urrea and Calvo, 2014). International standards require communities’ consent for eviction and relocation, as well as for projects that threaten the physical and cultural survival of communities.

Actors

Actor
Participation
Functional group
Geographical scale
Wayuú people
Wayuú people
Participation
Functional group
Civil Society
Geographical scale
Internal grassroots
Cerrejón Company
Cerrejón Company
Participation
Functional group
Commercial
Geographical scale
Internal national
Conflict Party

Conflict resolution

The Cerrejón Company is one of the companies that are assisting in the development of the United Nation's guiding principles about companies and human rights (Cerrejón, 2014); however, these guiding principles have been deficiently enforced in the Guajira region to date. By contrast, the Wayuú communities have promoted resistance to mining activities, appealing to national and international public opinion.

Legal actions of the Wayuú Women's Strength Organization

The Wayuú Women’s Strength organization, for example, carried out studies on the socio-environmental impacts of mining activities in their territory. The group has also presented a series of appeals to the Standing Tribunal of the Peoples in Colombia and the National Consensus-building Group, demanding indemnity, compensation and reparations for the damages caused (Hemera Foundation, 2008).

The Wayuú people's claims

The Wayuú people are demanding that the Company publicly acknowledge the adverse environmental impacts of mining, and also that it commit to reaching agreements with  negatively affected communities in order to compensate them for detriments caused by mining activities and to establish actions to mitigate potential future impacts. They also demand that the Company implements a protocol for dialogue, consultation and participation by communities when making decisions that affect them. This protocol must be coherent with the international standards established in ILO Agreement No. 169, the United Nations Declaration about the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the recommendations by special United Nations mechanisms for the indigenous peoples (Berraondo, 2014).

Resilience and Peace Building

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Mediation & arbitration

After conducting a study on the socio-environmental impacts of the mining activities in their territory, the Wayuú Women’s Strength organization submitted a series of appeals to the the Standing Tribunal of the Peoples in Colombia and the National Consensus-building Group, demanding indemnity, compensation and reparations for the damages caused.

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Social inclusion & empowerment

While the Cerrejón Company is involved in the development of the United Nation's guiding principles about companies and human rights, it has not adhered to such guiding principles in the Guajira region.