Skip links
Shopping Cart
Shopping Cart

Three communities in Papua New Guinea are waiting for the country’s Supreme Court to decide whether their concerns about the dumping of mine waste in the sea near their homes merit cancellation of an environmental permit for mining that the government issued in 2020. U.S.-based Newmont Corporation and South Africa’s Harmony Gold Ltd., the partners in the development of the Wafi-Golpu copper and gold mine in Morobe province, want to pipe a slurry of leftover sediment, known as tailings, through a 103-kilometer (64-mile) pipeline. According to the companies’ plans, the tailings will travel from the mine through the pipeline until being discharged 200 meters (about 660 feet) under the sea at a point less than 1 km (0.6 mi) offshore in the Huon Gulf along PNG’s northern coastline. The method is known as deep-sea tailings placement (DSTP), and in December 2020, PNG’s Conservation and Environmental Protection Authority (CEPA) approved the plan laid out in the companies’ environmental impact statement (EIS). That approval triggered a series of legal battles beginning in 2021 that questioned whether Huon Gulf communities had been adequately informed of the risks of DSTP. Most recently, three leaders representing the villages of Labu Butu, Wagang and Yanga, located near the pipeline, sued CEPA’s leader and the government. Initially, the lawsuits aimed to stop the government from issuing a permit for large-scale mines called a “special mining lease” that would allow the project to move forward, citing the possibility of “catastrophic and irreplaceable damage to the marine environment and…This article was originally published on Mongabay

Research

Featured News

Explaining Katsina’s Massive Leap to 2nd Position in the 2025 Climate Governance Ranking

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

In 2024, during the first edition of the Subnational Climate Governance Performance Rating and Ranking,

COP30: Firm to connect institutions with international climate finance opportunities

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

SISTME, a climate change and biodiversity conservation consulting firm based in Argentina, has offered to

From resistance to planetary governance, Indigenous women redefine global climate action

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

While world leaders negotiate behind closed doors in the Blue Zone of COP30, Indigenous Women

Sahara Group Foundation launches 16th Sahara Go Recycling Hub to boost environmental sustainability, economic empowerment

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

Sahara Group Foundation, the corporate social impact arm of Sahara Group, has commissioned its 16th

Climate finance is the lifeblood of climate action – Simon Stiell at COP30

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

Remarks delivered by UN Climate Change Executive Secretary, Simon Stiell, at the third High-Level Ministerial

UNDP, REA, GEF commission Plateau solar mini-grid to power agricultural value chains, empower rural communities

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), in partnership with the Rural Electrification Agency (REA) and

COP30: Africa urges world leaders to turn pledges into action

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

Africa has called on the world leaders to turn their pledges into action regarding the

Thousands join global marches calling on govts at COP30 to deliver climate justice

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

An estimated 30,000 people marched through the Brazilian city of Belém on Saturday, November 15,