- US businesses 'hesitant' before 2024 elections: Federal Reserve
- Leverkusen held to stalemate in Champions League by battling Brest
- Frustrated Atalanta held to goalless draw by Celtic in Champions League
- Djokovic won't play Paris Masters, leaving doubt over season
- Bolivian transport workers strike over fuel shortages
- Fury expects to knock out Usyk in heavyweight title rematch
- Georgia ruling party stages mass rally ahead of key vote
- Attack kills 4, injures 14 at Turkey defence firm
- Another French top pick: Zaccharie Risacher starts life in the NBA
- EU chief starts Balkans tour, says enlargement 'top priority'
- Destitute Gazans cold 'every night' as winter approaches
- Asalanka stars as Sri Lanka defeat West Indies in second ODI, clinch series
- 'The whole city shook': Israel pounds Lebanon's ancient Tyre
- Belarus to hold presidential vote on January 26
- BHP denies responsibility for 2015 Brazil mine disaster at London trial
- Lagarde says ECB should be careful with rise in emerging currencies
- Shiffrin to skip downhill, no stress over landmark World Cup victories
- US says N.Korea sent 'thousands' of troops to Russia
- Emery already one of 'Villa's greats', says McGinn
- 4 dead, 14 hurt in attack at Turkey defence firm
- Activists take German government to court over biodiversity
- US existing home sales slip in September to near 14-year low
- Bank of Canada cuts rates, says fight against inflation 'worked'
- Zimbabwe smash T20I record with 344-4 against Gambia
- Boeing reports $6.2 bn loss as it awaits vote on end to strike
- Mourinho says Man Utd 'will succeed sooner or later'
- China should use fiscal policy to boost growth: IMF
- Wolfspeed and ZF put German chip factory on ice
- Putin faces calls for peace at flagship BRICS summit
- Stock markets and oil prices retreat
- Dupont back in France squad for November internationals
- Caelan Doris to captain Ireland in November rugby Tests
- 14 dead, thousands evacuated as tropical storm batters Philippines
- Boeing reports $6.2 bn loss on strike, defense contract woes
- Germany's Scholz heads to India despite differences on Russia
- Sri Lanka deploys troops to Jewish community centre after US warning
- Sione Tuipulotu named as Scotland captain for November internationals
- 'I'm broken', mass rape victim tells French court
- Don't let tech gurus decide the future: Nobel winner Simon Johnson
- Palestinian seeds join Arctic 'doomsday vault'
- Ariana Grande concert attack survivors win UK harassment case
- Blinken on new quest for Saudi ties with Israel
- UK and Germany sign 'milestone' defence deal
- Seoul says N.Korea sent more troops to Russia, Kyiv urges their surrender
- Mehidy, Jaker keep Bangladesh alive against South Africa
- Stock markets mixed, oil prices drop
- Stokes forecasts spin battle in Pakistan-England decider
- Volvo Cars cuts sales forecast on market headwinds
- South Africa 'shattered' by divorce of rugby star Kolisi
- Putin touts 'multipolar world order' at flagship BRICS summit
RIO | -1.71% | 64.378 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.38% | 24.641 | $ | |
RBGPF | 1.59% | 63 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.96% | 7.29 | $ | |
NGG | 0.01% | 66.295 | $ | |
RELX | -0.34% | 46.86 | $ | |
BCC | 0.65% | 134.53 | $ | |
SCS | -2.77% | 12.465 | $ | |
GSK | -0.3% | 37.885 | $ | |
VOD | -1% | 9.455 | $ | |
JRI | -0.31% | 13.03 | $ | |
BP | -1.3% | 31.176 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.89% | 24.71 | $ | |
AZN | -0.76% | 76.74 | $ | |
BCE | -0.71% | 33.084 | $ | |
BTI | -0.65% | 34.665 | $ |
BHP denies responsibility for 2015 Brazil mine disaster at London trial
Australian mining giant BHP on Wednesday denied responsibility for a 2015 dam collapse in Brazil, one of the country's worst environmental disasters, as it opened its defence at the High Court in London.
The months-long trial will determine whether BHP is liable for the rupture at the Fundao tailing dam in Brazil that killed 19 people and unleashed a deluge of thick toxic mud into villages, fields, rainforest, rivers and the ocean.
More than 620,000 complainants, including 46 Brazilian municipalities, companies and indigenous peoples, are seeking an estimated £36 billion ($47 million) in damages in the civil trial.
The company's lawyer Shaheed Fatima argued BHP cannot be held as the "direct polluter" as the dam was managed by Samarco, co-owned by BHP and Brazilian miner Vale.
The tragedy in the town of Mariana unleashed almost 45 million cubic metres of highly toxic mining waste sludge, flooding 39 towns and leaving more than 600 people homeless.
The flood killed thousands of animals and devastated protected tropical rainforest.
According to the victims' lawyers, BHP was aware that an accumulation of toxic sludge, estimated at 1.3 million tonnes per year, far exceeded the annual limit set -- a build-up which they say contributed to the disaster.
BHP's other defence lawyer Daniel Toledano said the complainants have failed to point to "an act or omission from BHP from which the damage would necessarily have followed".
- 'Permanent effects' -
At the time of the disaster, BHP had global headquarters in Britain and Australia.
In opening submissions to the court Monday, the company laid out as a central argument that it "did not own or operate the dam or any related facilities".
A separate case in Brazil has seen Vale and BHP offer to pay almost $30 billion in compensation. This was increased on the eve of the London trial from almost $25 billion.
BHP and Vale estimate that more than 430,000 complainants have already received compensation, including more than 200,000 party to the London case.
BHP added that the Renova Foundation, which manages compensation and rehabilitation programmes, has already paid out more than $7.9 billion in emergency aid.
The Australian mining giant has also said that the quality of river water contaminated by the fallout has returned to pre-disaster levels.
However, a scientific paper published this year in the Franco-Brazilian geography review Confins said the dam rupture had caused "permanent effects of pollution" on the river Doce and its coastal plain.
The hearing, set to last until March, must determine BHP's potential liability for the disaster.
If BHP is ruled liable, another trial would take place from October 2026 to determine the damages.
P.Silva--AMWN