Environment News Service (ENS)
ENS logo

Bauxite Mine Fight Looms in Jamaica's Cockpit Country

KINGSTON, Jamaica, October 24, 2006 (ENS) - Drilling for bauxite samples in Jamaica's Cockpit Country is threatening the plants and animals that live in the region's moist tropical limestone forest, said conservationists today. Bauxite is the raw material for aluminum.

Cockpit Country is in northwestern Jamaica near the tourist resorts of Montego Bay and Ocho Rios. It is about 130 miles (209 kilometers) from the capital city of Kingston. Central Jamaica was once blanketed with wet limestone forests. The 173 square miles (450 square kilometers) of Cockpit Country represent the largest and most intact portion left.

At risk species such as the black-billed parrot, the yellow-billed parrot, the ring-tailed pigeon and the plain pigeon live in this uninhabited area of yellow and white limestone karst terrain, distinguished by its dramatic topography of rounded peaks and steep-sided, bowl-shaped depressions - said to resemble cockfighting pits.

parrot

The rare yellow-billed parrot, Amazona collaria, is protected by the government of Jamaica, but still is at risk of habitat destruction. This bird is sheltered by the Seven Oaks Sanctuary for Wildlife in Runaway Bay, Jamaica. (Photo courtesy SOS Jamaica)
These species forage mostly on bromeliads - epiphytic plants growing on the branches of trees. But bromeliads are especially vulnerable to forest fragmentation and caustic dust from mining.

Several of the region's 300 caves, such as Windsor Great Cave and Marta Tick Cave, are notable for the size and diversity of their bat caves. Some caves support colonies of more than 50,000 bats. Three species of bats, including the at risk Jamaican flower bat, are endemic to Jamaica.

Cockpit Country is Jamaica's top refuge for endemic plants. At least 101 species of unique plants grow in this region, some isolated to just one hillock, according to the Nature Conservancy. Based in Arlington, Virginia, the group is working with Jamaican conservation organizations to safeguard the region.

Alcoa, the world's largest producer of aluminum, has been mining bauxite in Jamaica since 1963. Since 2004 it has been prospecting for bauxite in Cockpit Country. The company's license expired in May, but it is expected to be renewed.

Typically, bulldozers remove topsoil and dig out the mineral before the soil is replaced and replanted with grass or crops.

According to Marilyn Headley, Jamaica's conservator of forests, trees will be replanted if the forest reserve is mined.

But environmental groups say such damage would be irreparable.

deforestation

Deforestation is leaving Cockpit Country hills bare and vulnerable to erosion. (Photo courtesy Go Local Jamaica)
"Unfortunately for the birds, landscape, and many communities, Jamaica is pushing hard to extract every bit of bauxite from her soils to export for aluminum production,"said Susan Koenig, of the Cockpit Country Stakeholders Group, a coalition of environmentalists, tourism industry representatives and schools.

"The ecological damage wrought by the industry is astounding for a medium sized island," said Koenig.

Bauxite is a major driver of Jamaica's economy, generating $900 million in 2004, with $370 million of that staying in the country, according to the Jamaica Information Service. The country is the fifth largest bauxite producer in the world.

In July 2005, Alcoa's Board of Directors approved plans to join with the government of Jamaica to expand the Jamalco alumina refinery in Clarendon. Jamalco is owned 50 percent by the Jamaican government and 50 percent by Alcoa Minerals of Jamaica.

bauxite

Alumina is derived from bauxite, here being unloaded from a dump truck at a mining site in Jamaica. (Photo courtesy Hydro)
The first phase of this expansion, due for completion by year-end, will add about 150,000 metric tons per year of production capacity to the refinery.

Jamalco mines bauxite in the hills of Manchester with a mining contractor, refines it into alumina at the refinery in Clarendon, and ships the alumina from the port at Rocky Point primarily to Alcoa's Canadian operations.

Koenig argues that damaging one of the world's most important and spectacular karst landscapes to get at the bauxite underneath makes no long-term economic sense. Tourism generates 45 percent of Jamaica's foreign earnings, and directly or indirectly, provides jobs for around a quarter of the working population, she claims, adding that mining employs far fewer people and is not sustainable.

"We are well aware of the environmental sensitivity and cultural significance of Cockpit Country and, as always, remain open to discussion with any group that is interested in our activities," Kevin Lowery, a spokesman with Alcoa, told the "Miami Herald" today.

Bauxite mining is not the only threat to Cockpit Country, according to the Nature Conservancy.

Small-scale agriculture, particularly yam cultivation, is an immediate threat to the forests, said the group. Farmers use saplings harvested from the forest as "yam sticks" to support the plant as it grows. Demand is estimated at six million yam sticks per year.

farm

Yams, sugar cane and corn on a Cockpit Country farm (Photo courtesy Go Local Jamaica)
Clearing of land to make room for cattle, crops and housing developments that serve the needs of a growing human population has led to reduced water quality, soil erosion and the decrease of vital plants and animals.

Poor farming practices that cause a loss in soil fertility and erosion leads to a loss of topsoil and dirtying of Jamaica's water supplies.

As farmers cut more and more of the tropical rain forest, fewer of the country's native animals have the food and shelter they need to survive.

The Nature Conservancy is working with three local partners, the South Trelawny Environmental Agency, the Windsor Research Center and Jamaica's Forestry Department, to develop a long-term protection plan for the region.

The plan includes developing a field demonstration site that uses yam sticks made of recycled plastic instead of saplings.

Part of the plan is to offer tax exemptions or direct payments to private landowners who set aside at least 100 acres (40 hectares) of forest as a reserve.

The Conservancy is also training at least 10 residents of Cockpit Country communities as enforcement officers to patrol the area for illegal loggers and miners.

 

Entergy Releases 2008 Sustainability Report Plant a Tree for Arbor Day with Mohawk Friends of Animals Win: African Antelope Shielded From Safari Club and Trophy Tourists Green Program Launched to Keep City Parks Poo Free U-Haul Customers Give $1 Million to Charity Core Services Reduces Its Impact on the Environment and Its Use of Natural Resources Women Are the Energy Decision Makers and Want the U.S. to Move Toward Clean Energy, a New National Survey Shows Mohawk Fine Papers Supports Two New Alternative Energy Projects Atrion Leverages Content Expertise to Launch New Generation of RegDBOnline Database for Global Environment, Health, Safety and Transport Information SPIN-Gardening™ Discussion and Action Guide Now Available Medical Experts Prescribe Legislation to Help Prevent Cancer Think London's 'Route to 2012' Olympic Games Roadshow With UKTI Underway With Cleantech Panel Discussion in San Francisco Planet Green's Blue August Month Dives Into Summer With a Celebration of the Oceans Anheuser-Busch Launches Employee Program to Support World Environment Day Hollywood Studios Say No to Plastic Dry-Cleaning Bags and Yes to the Green Garmento Global Advanced Recycling Technology Ltd (GAR-Tech) and Managing Director, Derek W R Reffell, Answer Allegations by PowerMaster Corp. New Green Homes Course and Educational Set Now Available For College Educators Tigo Energy Reaches Key Milestones and Raises $10 Million 'B' Round Financing Atrion First to Deliver Support for EU's new Regulation on Classification, Labeling and Packaging With IA 4.1 GREEN BASH – Multimedia Arts Meet the Green Movement The Global Green Portal Launched NatureAir Receives Prestigious Recognition from World Travel & Tourism Council Master Planning Sustainable Green Communities Energy, Environment and Technology News (EETN) Announces New Blog Monitor Service IC Bus Helps Emeryville, California Go Green With New Hybrid Commercial Buses Natural Selection, Inc. and Empowered Energy Solutions, Inc. Partner for Optimized Renewable Energy Products Architect John Blackburn Launches Eco-Friendly Barn Designs for Equestrian and Agricultural Use Global Advanced Recycling Technology ("Gar-Tech") and Managing Director Derek Reffell Default on Lawsuit Brought by Powermaster Corp. Green Energy Technologies Launches WindCube(R) at Windpower 2009 Thieves Launch New Portable Tetra Pak Wines for Summer NonProfitShoppingMall.com Celebrates Mother's Day and Mother Earth, Naming EarthShare Its Featured Charity Partner for May SustainableBusiness.com/
GreenDreamJobs.com Enters Strategic Partnership with Footprint Media
Virginia Plant Takes Top Environmental Honors in National Cement Awards Fresh Perspective Launches Research Tool for Business Leaders Overwhelmed by Information Pending Bill on Renewable Energy Omits Huge Source Matter Network Has Most Engaged Green Audience, According to comScore Occidental Petroleum's Toxic Legacy in the Peruvian Amazon To Dominate Annual Meeting, Says Amazon Watch New Experience-based Book & DVD Set Offers Unique Opportunity for Understanding Green Homes Siemens Building Technologies: Committed to a Greener, Sustainable Future Save The Planet -- Win a Prize Capital-Intensive Cleantech Innovations May Lose out in Battle to Secure Funding EMS Teams With MATRA for the Rebirth of a Legend: The Limited Edition TidalForce(TM) M-750 x2.0 Electric Bike World's First Green Hotels Directory Launched PR Newswire and World-Wire Join Forces to Showcase Environmentally-Focused News and Events
WW TRANSMIT
 

License ENS News
for websites and newsletters

Send a news story to ENS editors

Upload environmental news videos

Share ENS stories with the world