A/HRC/41/54
practices, such as the introduction of transgenic seeds, including against the will of
indigenous peoples and people of African descent. Extractivist projects also result in
contamination and overexploitation of water, which deprive these groups of this essential
resource.
52.
The environmental and health consequences of fundamental extractivist processes
are well documented. In the mining context, the case of gold extraction using mercury and
other chemicals is illustrative. One submission received for the present report highlights the
environmental devastation in French Guiana caused by mercury poisoning, which results in
cases of indigenous children being born with developmental disabilities. Another
submission highlighted how a racially divided labour regime in South Africa, which
protected whites but exposed non-whites to more dangerous jobs during the colonial era
and apartheid, continued to be unjust even today. Non-white gold miners who had
contracted silicosis under discriminatory conditions remain uncompensated to this day, and
mining companies refuse to address fully the human rights violations for which they are
responsible in this context.
53.
A common method of extracting oil and natural gas from the ground – hydraulic
fracturing or fracking – by its very nature alters the environment, and risks environmental
harm.79 Despite claims that fracking is a safe method for extracting natural gas, there is
evidence of its harmful effects on the environment and the health of local populations. 80
Fracking threatens human rights through air pollution, groundwater contamination and
surface water pollution, all of which can lead to health problems. 81 For example, in 2011, a
fracking well in the United States malfunctioned and spewed thousands of gallons of
contaminated fracking water into the environment. 82 Also in the United States, a study
found that drinking water near fracking wells had dangerous levels of methane. 83 As
regards oil extraction, oil spills and other forms of oil contamination can be devastating.
Consider the 2008 Royal Dutch Shell oil spill that poured tens of thousands of barrels of
crude oil into the water around Bodo in Nigeria. 84 Fishing, which the local population in
Bodo had relied upon heavily as a source of income, dried up for many families after the oil
spill.85 Even alternative ways to earn money, such as farming or cutting firewood, were
affected, as the oil spill had polluted the farmlands and forests, preventing normal growth. 86
In the 10 years since the oil spill, research has found that the average surface soil
contamination has tripled.87 In 2015, Shell reached a settlement that resulted in a payout of
approximately 600,000 Nigeria naira (about $3,000 at the time) to most claimants. 88 Sums
of that size cannot come close to remedying the devastating effects of the spill on the
affected communities.
54.
Artisanal mining is a common practice in extracting gold, which is a flourishing
industry in certain African, Asian and Latin American and countries. About half of the
world’s estimated 30 million artisanal and small-scale miners are dedicated to gold-mining,
and approximately 20 per cent of the world’s gold is produced through artisanal and other
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
www.greenpeace.org/usa/global-warming/issues/fracking/environmental-impacts-water; and
www.livescience.com/34464-what-is-fracking.html.
Ibid.
Ibid.
https://pennenvironment.org/sites/environment/files/reports/PA_Close_Fracking_scrn.pdf, p. 21.
See Stephen G. Osborn and others, “Methane contamination of drinking water accompanying gaswell drilling and hydraulic fracturing”, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the
United States of America, vol. 108, No. 20.
See Scott Pegg and Nenibarini Zabbey, “Oil and water: the Bodo spills and the destruction of traditional
livelihood structures in the Niger Delta”, Community Development Journal, vol. 48, No. 3; and
www.amnestyusa.org/files/afr440182011en.pdf.
Ibid.
www.amnestyusa.org/files/afr440182011en.pdf.
David I. Little and others, “Sediment hydrocarbons in former mangrove areas, Southern Ogoniland,
Eastern Niger Delta, Nigeria”, in Threats to Mangrove Forests: Hazards, Vulnerability, and
Management, Christopher Makowski and Charles W. Finkl, eds. (Cham, Springer, 2018), p. 342.
www.leighday.co.uk/News/2015/January-2015/Shell-agrees-55m-compensation-deal-for-Nigeria-Del.
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