Brazil | 200 missing as Vale dam breaks, echoing 2015 tragedy

tailings dam owned by miner Vale SA broke in the state of Minas Gerais on Friday, hitting a local community near the capital and echoing a similar accident that became Brazil’s biggest environmental disaster three years ago.

By Saturday night, when authorities called off rescue efforts until day break, the death toll stood at 40 dead. Approximately 200 people are missing, according to seeveral media reports.

Helicopter footage from local television showed several buildings leveled by a slide of mining waste, and a sea of mud blocking roads.

Minas Gerais has formed a crisis management group and sent first responders to the affected area, according to a statement. Aircraft are doing flyovers as part of rescue operations, it said, without mentioning any deaths or injuries. Vale announced yesterday that rising water levels at its Dam 6 had prompted new evacuations of local residents.

President Jair Bolsonaro intended to visit the disaster zone on Saturday, according to a spokesman. Earlier, the president said he had sent a team of high-ranking officials to the area, including the ministers of environment, and mines and energy. “Our biggest concern at the moment is to attend to possible victims of this serious tragedy,” he posted on his twitter account.

In an emailed statement, Vale said there are possible victims among employees who were at an administrative facility hit by the mud. It added there’s no information about the cause of the accident. The failed dam serves the Feijao mine, one of Vale’s smaller operations that produced 7.8 million tons of iron ore in 2017, according to the company.

In Brazil’s largest-ever environmental catastrophe, another tailings dam collapsed near the municipality of Mariana, also in Minas Gerais state, in November 2015. It spilled the equivalent of 25,000 Olympic swimming pools of toxic mud that destroyed entire towns, contaminated waterways and resulted in 19 deaths. The dam was owned by Samarco, a joint-venture between Vale and BHP Billiton Ltd.

While the images of mud burying houses and cars are reminiscent of the 2015 disaster, the scale should be quite different. The Feijao dam’s capacity is no more than 2 million cubic meters, while the Samarco dam spilled 50 million cubic meters into the surrounding environment, according to a committee that gathers 110 groups advocating for greater mining regulation.

“The type of waste is similar to Mariana’s, but the volume is significantly lower,” said Katia Visentainer, a spokeswoman for the committee. “Also, the Mariana disaster happened during a raining season, which augmented its impacts. It’s not the case now.” MDT/Agencies

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