Australian exploration and mining firm, Zambezi Resources, defended
its mining project in a national park in Zambia Tuesday, saying it will
be the "cleanest, greenest and safest copper mine ever built."The
Australian firm has been given a go-ahead by the Zambian government for
its 494-million-U.S dollar open-cast project in Lower Zambezi National
Park, situated southeast of Lusaka, capital of Zambia,Waterborne resin despite
resistance from environmental lobby groups.Last month, the Zambian
government overturned a decision by the country's environmental
regulator, the Zambia Environmental Management Authority (ZEMA), which
rejected the project on grounds that it may have negative environmental
implications on the park.Over 100 environmental lobby groups have since
filed with the court an injunction request to have the project
halted.But David Vilensky,Sweet basil Zambezi
Resources's chairman, said the company would not do anything that may
jeopardize the park's environment and the company will work with local
people and environmentalists to ensure the conservation of the
park."Zambezi Resources is a responsible Australian company and
understands the importance of conserving the environment, particularly
in a sensitive area such as the Lower Zambezi National Park.
"For
this reason, we are keen to engage with local environmentalists to
ensure we can achieve a win-win situation: bringing jobs and prosperity
to local communities while protecting, and indeed enhancing,China visa the
flora and fauna of the area," he added.The project, he said, will
create an initial 500 jobs for people living in the surrounding area,
adding that traditional leaders in the area have backed the project."The
construction and development of the mine is subject to strict
conditions issued by ZEMA to ensure total compliance with the objectives
of the Environment Management Act of 2011, which will be monitored and
supervised by ZEMA," he said.Of the 4,092 square km covered by the Lower
Zambezi National Park, less than 6 percent, or 245 square km, is under
the mining license, said the statement.The statement also claimed that
the mine site lies in remote and inaccessible part of the park.The
Australian Stock Exchange-listed company has so far spent 60 million
dollars on its mining project in Zambia.
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