Preview

Oktedi Copper Mine

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
610 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Oktedi Copper Mine
The Ok Tedi Copper Mine
Ethical Issue

* Opening the mine without a waste storage. If they would have waited to open the mine for the waste storage to be completely finished they never would have started disposing trailing in the river.

* Environmental damage along the Ok Tedi. The environment that is affected is the river, the fish, the forest area along the river, the gardens, and hunting resources. The damage is already done to the environment. How long will it take to get back to a clean environment?

* The potential for civil disorder. The towns people generally support the mine but the animosity is caused by the damage it 's doing to the environment. Civil disorder could potentially be caused if they decide to close the mine because so many people will lose their jobs.

* Compensation and social development. A group of landowners petitioned the government to take action to prevent the discharge of the tailing into the river and to provide them with a compensation for their losses. The mine is giving back to the community with jobs, health benefits, schooling, training, etc.

ALTERNATIVES:
Based off all the facts and information that is present, there are four possible solutions to this problem:
1. Continue operating the mine and dredging in the lower Ok Tedi River.
2. Continue operating the mine, dredging and build a new storage facility for the future mine tailings.
3. Continue operating the mine and do nothing else.
4. Close down the mine immediately.
Alternative 1 If Ok Tedi Mining was to continue operating the mine and dredging in the lower Ok Tedi River, this would lower the sand levels which in return would decrease the chance of flooding. Dredging would still cause the sediment to move down stream. Since the sediment is still accumulating it is still affecting the forests and environment. Also, to mine and dread is going to potentially be an additional cost between $300-$400 (millions). This amount



References: Velasquez, G. Business ethics concepts & cases. New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Better Essays

    Centralia Mine

    • 1226 Words
    • 5 Pages

    On March 25, 1947, in Centralia, Illinois, the explosion of the Centralia #5 Mine resulted in the death of 111 hardworking men. Most of these men dedicated their lives to the Bell & Zoller Coal Company mining coal at the company’s Centralia #5 Mine. This group of men attempted on numerous occasions to get help from agencies and elected officials that were expected to protect them. The miners found this group of people completely out of touch. The agencies and elected officials wrongly thought that writing reports and having meetings would solve a problem or make it go away by itself. Others seemed unwilling to help them for fear of the loss of their own jobs or political status.…

    • 1226 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    On March 25, 1947, a blast in Centralia Coal Mine killed 111 workers. Centralia Coal Mine No. 5 had been operational since 1907 and had never suffered a major disaster. Prior to this event only four shotfirers were killed in 1921 (Fleege). Because of the safety record of the mine, it was considered relatively safe and a disaster seemed remote. The United States had just ended a war and the economy was picking up and production needs were relatively high. Mine operators were being pushed by the federal government to produce as much coal as possible to meet the demands of the robust economy. Because of the demand, safety factors in the mines were not a top priority, therefore, conditions deteriorated tremendously during this period.…

    • 1428 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Mountaintop Removal Mining

    • 3471 Words
    • 14 Pages

    Do you ever wonder or consider where the energy is coming from when you flip the switch every time you need electrical power? I don’t think many people have any idea where that energy is coming from. The same disconnection can be applied to the food industry. This disconnection between these services that everyone is accustomed to having and using creates great problems, in my opinion. The coal industry has been fueling the United States for the last century. It used to be a highly labor intensive and dangerous occupation to be a miner and the mining industry employed many people. Beginning in the 1990’s, a new way to extract coal that is highly machine driven and efficient emerged in Appalachia known as Mountaintop Removal Mining (MTR). I want to address the issues of mountaintop removal mining. The basic structure of the paper will be: (I) First, I will present a technical description of what happens during mountaintop removal mining. (II) Next, I will address the environmental, human health, and institutional problems caused mountaintop removal mining in the Appalachians. (III) I will then focus on solutions and changes that need to be addressed to deal with the environmental and social problems.…

    • 3471 Words
    • 14 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    War on Coal

    • 1107 Words
    • 5 Pages

    “President Obama is responsible entirely for the closure of that mine and the loses of these jobs”, Robert Murray CEO of Murray Energy Corporation told CNN after 239 men were laid off because an Ohio mine had closed. The current war on coal is not one of just and fair reasons. Coal has several positive benefits that greatly outweigh the negative environmental effects that some say it causes. The main benefit of coal is the hundreds of thousands it employs annually. However, with the strict regulations being put on coal mines these days the tradition of coal mining may be one our children will never know. It is our responsibility as Americans to beat the Obama Administration and win the war on coal.…

    • 1107 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    ESPM 50AC Final Paper

    • 1368 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Appalachia Mountains are rich in natural resources, containing an abundant number of coal, timber, oil, gas, and water (Daugneaux 1981). These natural resources have historically influenced the economic characteristics of the region. The region's economy has been highly dependent on mining, forestry, agriculture, chemical industries, and heavy industry, among which coal mining appears to be the largest financial contributor to the economy (Appalachia's Economy). However, the mining practice used to extract coal in Appalachia called mountaintop removal mining brings serious environmental health threat. The radical strip-mining process blow the tops off mountains with thousands of pounds of explosives to reach thin seams of coal. They then dump millions of tons of rubble and toxic waste into the streams and valleys below the mining sites (Mining: Destroying Mountains). The waste dumped contaminates drinking water, destroys wild habitat, buries mountain streams, and kills wildlife, bringing devastating damages to the entire communities. There are four distinctive people groups that are involved in the mountaintop removing process, the Appalachians, the coal companies, environmental groups and the government. In this paper I will identify the approach to resource management of these four groups in this mountaintop-removal mining case respectively and compare their approaches and find how different interests affect the way natural resources have been understood, used, and allocated.…

    • 1368 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Farmers will not be able to use the polluted water to water their crops. Farmers would have to find a clean source of water to use for their crops.…

    • 760 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Tar Creek Superfund Site

    • 762 Words
    • 4 Pages

    This area was home to very popular lead and zinc mines during World War 1 and World War 2. “Over the years, the mining companies disposed of the chat by collecting it into large aboveground piles, and by dumping it into flotation or tailing ponds” (ATSDR). Quite often, waste materials from mining were dumped into exploration holes dug out to map mining areas. After the mining had stopped in the 1960’s, the mines flooded and these waste materials began to mix in with the rest of the water that filled the mine. Eventually, this water reached the surface and formed springs of contaminated water. “Highly contaminated acid mine water began flowing from the mine shafts in Ottawa County Oklahoma in 1979, just as predicted by the miners during the 1950’s and in 1977 by S.J. Playton of the USGS. This acid mine water undoubtedly impacted the aquatic and riparian communities of Tar Creek and other local streams and lakes” (www.tarcreek.org). There have been quite a few remediation efforts that have occurred in the area as a result of the “Oklahoma Plan for Tar Creek”. Four of the main objectives in remediating Tar Creek are to improve the quality of surface water, minimizing the amount of exposure to lead dust, tending to mine hazards such as sink holes, and just the reclamation of the land as a whole. “This plan effectively establishes more than a discrete set of cleanup projects; it also…

    • 762 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    If I were to try and resolve these issues, I would contact major company owners such as mining companies. A few of the things I would ask…

    • 325 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Buffalo creek disaster

    • 516 Words
    • 2 Pages

    One of the most significant mining disaster happened at a little valley that located in Buffalo count, West Virginia in February 1972. The disaster cause by a dam corruption which was used to block black water produced in mining procedures. The flood break out from the fallen dam and rush out the 17 mile valley below it, killed more than 100 people, 1000 people injured and more than 4000 people were homeless. The disaster quickly gain the attention from the author of the book, Gerald M. Stern, also was a attorney who just finished representing African American in the south. Stern was shocked by this man-made disaster and decided to represent the survivors.…

    • 516 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Given that there is no “one perfect solution” for this situation, identify, describe, and defend two possible solutions to the primary problem(s).…

    • 511 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    For example, in 1853, E.A. Stevenson states, “I saw the Indians taking barrels of these beautiful fish and drying them for the winter. But the miners have turned the streams from their beds and conveyed the water to the mines... ”(Doc. 2). The Indians couldn’t hunt anymore because of the scarcity of the water, caused by the gold miners. In order for the Native Americans to provide for their families, they will need water so that they could hunt for fish. Because the Native Americans lost all of their water, from the miners stealing it, the Native Americans couldn’t provide for their family. This meant that most of the water was going to the miners, which wasn’t where most of the water should be because it’s not benefiting the state as a whole. The only people who were benefited from this were the miners. Another example, in 1997, Jerry Stanley stated, “The Gold Rush meant death by starvation for thousands of Native Californians, and death from disease for thousands more...Hydraulic mining, by which hillsides were sprayed with large quantities of water, destroyed plants and wildlife habitats ” ( Doc. 7). The Gold Rush led to the starvation of the Native Americans and destroyed the environment. The people who were trying to find gold polluted the land and they starved the Native Americans and destroyed the environment. This quote connects to the…

    • 1628 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Ludlow Massacre

    • 1633 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Money was the main reason for improvements in the mine and the safety and concerns of miners were less important. The miners had begun to lose there jobs because of the mechanization. They no longer needed to have people digging for coal because the machines did all the work for them. These machines had taken over the industry. Because the machines could produce more coal in a shorter time, the amount of money paid per ton of coal dropped. The quality of life of the minors and their families dropped as well. The majority of the miners jobs had been taken and others had quit because of the reduced pay. In the months that followed, over 1,200 miners that went on strike including there families. Men, women, and children stood together in protest. The United Mine Worker of America was formed and the miners began to stand up as a group. They demanded that their union be recognized. Their demands were narrowed down to seven. First, they demanded recognition of the union. Second they had a ten percent increase in wages. Third, was that they each had to work eight hour days. Fourth, was that instead of getting paid for what they brought they'd get paid for just getting the load ready. Fifth, they would elect people to check the weight of the bags. Sixth, is the right to trade in any store, board anyway, and hire the services of any doctor. Seven, the enforcement of Colorado mining laws…

    • 1633 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    From a social view point, the conservationists cared about the general public and the environment. The dumping of sawdust meant that health hazards are created for the public, such as bacteria. (95) The fish living in the polluted water are affected since they cannot survive such conditions. Navigation becomes dangerous because the boats would hit heavy waste, damaging the boat and the people onboard. Lastly, the sawdust is simply destroying the natural beauty of the environment, what once was a spectacular scene now looks and smells bad. The conservationists need to get the general public to pressure the government into acting and stopping these events from happening. (87)…

    • 523 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Tar Creek Conflict Theory

    • 676 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Picher and Tar Creek are products of the long history of maltreatment of Native Americans in this country. The Quapaw Indians were forced from their home in Arkansas onto a reservation encompassing the Tar Creek region and attempted to make a life but were continuously bullied by the federal government and big mining businesses with no regard for their well being or future. The government went as far as naming many Indian land owners unfit to make decisions so that they did not have to be consulted for the mining companies to dig up their land. When the damage was done and the area became a superfund site, the businesses that had made so much money at the expense of the Quapaw tribe were not held responsible and the government attempted several half hearted clean up attempts to sweep the issue under the rug. When eventually they had to buyout the town they did it as cheaply and quickly as possible with clear prejudice against the Native Americans still in Picher. The government did a good job of keeping the issue quiet and the people of Picher became discouraged and accepted their defeat eventually relocating with the little they had left. The Quapaw tribe was left with this worthless and toxic land with no reparations paid and the evidence that the danger is spreading constantly. Unfortunately I think that the issue will not truly be resolved until it begins to hurt those in power personally or as a nation we push for a resolution and our…

    • 676 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    water scarcity

    • 362 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Political and administrative boundaries are seldom drawn along lines which are logical from a hydrological perspective. Our government is not doing enough to step in and monitor the indolence of these companies and to put a cap on how much they can “steal” from mother earth. I realize a natural resource is there for the taking but there’s a difference when it’s being abused. Maybe there’s a secret “kick back” we don’t know about!…

    • 362 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics