Canadian Mining in Latin America: the Politics and Ethics of Resource Extraction
A Roundtable with
- David Deisley, Executive Vice President, Corporate Affairs, and General Counsel, Goldcorp
- Steve Stewart, Program Director, CoDevelopment Canada, and Mining Justice Alliance
- Marcello Veiga, Norman B. Keevil Institute of Mining Engineering, UBC
Moderated by Jon Beasley-Murray, Latin American Studies, UBC.
November 17, 2011, 3-5pm, Strategy Room 320, Wosk Centre for Dialogue, Simon Fraser University
For centuries, Latin America’s mineral resources have lured adventurers and entrepreneurs. From Columbus and the Conquistadors to nineteenth-century gold rushes and today’s multinationals, the promise of precious metals has drawn outsiders to the region.
The implications of mining have always been complicated, not least in a region in which indigenous rights and livelihoods are at stake, and where the environmental consequences can be enormous. And yet we have all depended upon the products of mining: from the silver that fuelled the industrial revolution to the lithium that powers our cellphones and electric cars.
Canada and Canadian firms are at the forefront of the mining industry. And some of the major firms with Latin American interests have their headquarters here in Vancouver. At times they have run into resistance and protest, both here and in the countries in which they operate. Yet the mining companies themselves are anxious to show they have a “social license” to operate, and to prove that they provide economic benefit at minimal environmental and social cost.
So what is the politics of mining today? What are the ethical considerations that guide (or should guide) resource extraction in Latin America? What is Canada’s role? What should ordinary Canadians think about the corporations that fly the flag south of the border and deep into the subsoil?
This roundtable, co-organized by UBC and SFU’s programs in Latin American Studies, brings together significant voices from both inside and outside the industry. The aim is debate, not celebration or denunciation. It is time to take a serious look at a complex set of issues.
Update: The discussion will be webcast courtesy of DS106 radio. The easiest way to listen to the feed is to click the following URL: http://bit.ly/ds106radio4life. If that doesn’t work, paste the following URL into iTunes or VLC: http://208.82.115.69:8010/stream.
Update: Listen again to the discussion! We have archived the audio of the event on the UBC wiki. You can also access this archive below. Many thanks to Brian Lamb for his vital technical assistance.