Beneath the shining white glaciers of the Andean mountains lie valuable deposits of gold, copper and molybdenum which, until recently, were off-limits to the mining companies that have set their eyes on these untapped minerals.
That could be about to change, after legislators in Argentina agreed to amend the Glacier Law that has prohibited all mining and exploration activities in the country’s glacier regions since 2010.
The legislation defined the country’s 16,000 glaciers – covering an area of 8,484 sq km (5,270 square miles) – as public goods, because of their importance as freshwater reserves, their role in biodiversity, their scientific value and their appeal as tourist attractions.
The amendment to the glacier protection law passed last month by the Argentine National Congress will make it easier to mine in the glacier regions, despite the role of these areas as vital water sources.
Concerned scientists have warned that the protection of the glaciers from mining, hydrocarbon extraction and polluting activities is on thin ice, with the new law permitting activities within periglacial areas, subject to technical assessments.
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