Argentina: thousands protest in Mendoza wine region over axed water protections

Law kept mining projects out of Argentina province – now water for wine-growers will be threatened in drought-stricken area

Argentina’s wine-growing province of Mendoza, renown for its inky red malbec varietal, has erupted in protest against the surprise overturning of a 2007 water protection law that had successfully kept water-intensive mining projects out of the province.

Thousands of people joined demonstrations on Monday outside the office of the provincial governor, Rodolfo Suárez, in the capital city, also called Mendoza, after he overturned the law, known as 7722, late last week.

The peaceful protest turned violent on Monday afternoon, as police fired rubber bullets and teargas into the crowd in response to stone-throwing by angry demonstrators.

#urgente represión en Mendoza. No a la violencia en una manifestación pacífica del pueblo reclamando al gobierno que de marcha atrás con una reforma que no tiene licencia social #La7722NoSeToca pic.twitter.com/kK3kwQFqWH

— PrensaUAC (@PrensaUAC) December 23, 2019

Suárez further infuriated the protesters on Sunday, when he announced 19 uranium, cooper, gold, lead, silver, zinc and iron mining projects. He argued that the projects will create tens of thousands of new jobs, and promised to use royalties for new irrigation projects.

But environmentalists warned that the mega-projects could threaten water sources that farmers and wine-growers depend on, in a semi-arid province which is already going through the worst drought in its history.

Many of the protesters had set out from the city of San Carlos, marching 86 miles through the scorching heat of the South American summer, after Suárez overturned the law on Friday. “Don’t touch the water!” protesters chanted outside the governor’s office on Monday.

“The modification of law 7722 will permit the use of sulphuric acid, cyanide and other toxic chemicals in the development of mega mining projects, which will generate the contamination of the province’s water,” Greenpeace Argentina said in a statement.

The law will be signed by Governor Suárez despite the protest, said Mendoza’s environmental secretary, Humberto Mingorance, on Monday. “The law
has consensus, Suárez never hid his promise to generate mining in Mendoza,” the official said following a meeting with four representatives of the demonstrators.

Argentina’s newly inaugurated president, Alberto Fernández, a moderate, business-friendly politician of the left-leaning populist Peronist party, has spoken out in favour of mining projects that he says are vital for Argentina’s recovery from its perennial economic malaise.

“Mining is a primordial activity,” Argentina’s new president said at a lunch with business leaders last week.

But some voices in his own party disagree. “Mendoza Law 7722 protected water by prohibiting the use of toxic substances in mining,” tweeted Senator Pino Solanas, the president’s newly appointed ambassador to Unesco in New York. “Its modification is an environmental step backwards that endangers the future of the region.”

Mendoza, the largest wine-producing region in Latin America, is a semi-arid desert that gets the water for its vineyards from the snowy caps of the nearby Andes mountain range, already diminishing from the stress of global warming.

The province, which produces 80% of Argentina’s wine, is also a thriving tourism destination for visitors from all over the world who arrive to explore its more than 1,000 wineries along the fabled Argentina Wine Route.

The people of Mendoza have a long history of environmental awareness. The law that was overturned on Friday was the result of sustained public demand. “This law was born on the streets,” Senator Solanas said.

“It is ridiculous that, during the worst drought on record, the province has decided to favour the polluting mining industry, instead of protecting the water resources it has. Undoubtedly, this resolution does not help to combat the effects of climate change that already affect the province,” said Laura Vidal, of Greenpeace Argentina.

Contributor

Uki Goñi in Buenos Aires

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