17.2 C
Belgrade
20/05/2024
Mining News

Portuguese protestors stand against lithium projects

Following the resignation of Antonio Costa as prime minister of Portugal on Tuesday, activists have taken to the streets to protest against lithium projects. The protestors want the government to suspend them due to alleged corruption in the handling of the “green” energy deals.

Costa resigned hours after his chief of staff was detained, along with five others. The detainees named two formal suspects close to the ex-prime minister in the investigation into lithium and hydrogen projects.

Supported by

In September, Portugal’s environment agency, APA, gave approval to local company Lusorecursos to extract battery-grade lithium and for London-based Savannah Resources to develop four open-pit mines, with production set to commence by the end of 2027. Both the mines are in northern Portugal, near the border with Spain

Local residents and environmentalists oppose the lithium projects, saying the processes lacked transparency, and have repeatedly warned of the “dangerous promiscuity” between government and mining companies.

Savannah said in a statement that it was cooperating with the authorities that visited the locations but that the company and its staff members were not the target of the investigation.

Eight anti-mining groups said in a joint statement that the prime minister’s resignation and the detainments were proof their concerns over corruption were legitimate.

 

Source: Mining Technology

Related posts

Mali signs agreement with China’s Ganfeng Lithium to operate Goulamina mine

David Lazarevic

UK’s Weardale Lithium plans advanced extraction plant for energy transition

David Lazarevic

EU nations outline plans for critical minerals investment at Raw Materials Summit

David Lazarevic
error: Content is protected !!