Satellite tv for pc photographs present surge in uncommon earth mining in rebel-held Myanmar

Satellite tv for pc photographs present surge in uncommon earth mining in rebel-held Myanmar

Bangkok, Thailand – A surge in uncommon earth mining in rebel-held pockets of Myanmar supplying Chinese language processing crops is being blamed for poisonous ranges of heavy metals in Thai waterways, together with the Mekong River.

China dominates the worldwide refining of uncommon earth metals – key inputs in all the pieces from wind generators to superior missile programs – however imports a lot of its uncooked materials from neighbouring Myanmar, the place the mines have been blamed for poisoning native communities.

Current satellite tv for pc photographs and water pattern testing recommend the mines are spreading, together with the environmental harm they trigger.

“For the reason that mining operation began, there is no such thing as a safety for the native individuals,” Sai Hor Hseng, a spokesman on the Shan Human Rights Basis, a neighborhood advocacy group primarily based in jap Myanmar’s Shan state, informed Al Jazeera.

“They don’t care what occurs to the surroundings,” he stated, or these residing downstream of the mines in Thailand.

An estimated 1,500 individuals rallied in northern Thailand’s Chiang Rai province in June, urging the Thai authorities and China to stress the mining operators in Myanmar to cease polluting their rivers.

Villagers in Chiang Rai first seen an odd orange-yellow tint to the Kok River – a tributary of the Mekong that enters Thailand from Myanmar – earlier than the beginning of this 12 months’s wet season in Might.

Repeated rounds of testing by Thai authorities since then have discovered ranges of arsenic and lead within the river a number of instances larger than what the World Well being Group (WHO) deems secure.

Thai authorities suggested locals residing alongside the Kok to not even contact the water, whereas exams have additionally discovered extra arsenic ranges within the Sai River, one other tributary of the Mekong that flows from Myanmar into Thailand, in addition to within the Mekong’s mainstream.

Locals at the moment are nervous concerning the hurt that contaminated water may do to their crops, their livestock and themselves.

Arsenic is infamously poisonous.

Medical research have linked long-term human publicity to excessive ranges of the chemical to neurological issues, organ failure and most cancers.

“This must be solved proper now; it can’t wait till the subsequent era, for the infants to be deformed or no matter,” Pianporn Deetes, Southeast Asia marketing campaign director on the advocacy group Worldwide Rivers, informed Al Jazeera.

“Individuals are involved additionally concerning the irrigation, as a result of … [they are] now utilizing the rivers – the water from the Kok River and the Sai River – for his or her rice paddies, and it’s an vital crop for the inhabitants right here,” Pianporn stated.

“We discovered from different areas already … that this type of exercise mustn’t occur within the upstream of the water supply of one million individuals,” she stated.

A satellite tv for pc picture of a uncommon earths mine website on the west aspect of the Kok River in Myanmar’s Shan state, as seen on Might 6, 2025 [Courtesy of the Shan Human Rights Foundation]

‘An excellent correlation’

Thai authorities blame upstream mining in Myanmar for the poisonous rivers, however they’ve been obscure concerning the precise supply or sources.

Rights teams and environmental activists say the mine websites are nestled in pockets of Shan state below the management of the United Wa State Military (UWSA), a well-armed, secretive insurgent group that runs two semi-autonomous enclaves within the space, one bordering China and the opposite Thailand.

That makes the websites exhausting to entry. Not even Myanmar’s army regime dares to ship troops into UWSA-held territory.

Whereas some have blamed the latest river air pollution on the UWSA’s gold mines, the most recent exams in Thailand lay a lot of the fault on the mining of uncommon earth minerals.

In a examine commissioned by the Thai authorities, Tanapon Phenrat, an affiliate professor of civil engineering at Naresuan College, took seven water samples from the Kok and surrounding rivers in early June.

Tanapon informed Al Jazeera that the samples collected closest to the border with Myanmar confirmed the best ranges of heavy metals and confirmed that the supply of the contamination lay upstream of Thailand in Shan state.

Mekong River Commission staff take a water sample for testing from the Mekong River along the Thai-Laos border on June 10, 2025. (Mekong River Commission)
Mekong River Fee (MRC) employees take a water pattern for testing from the Mekong River alongside the Thai-Laos border on June 10, 2025 [Courtesy of the MRC]

Considerably, Tanapon stated, the water samples contained the identical “fingerprint” of heavy metals, and in roughly the identical concentrations, as had earlier water samples from Myanmar’s Kachin State, north of Shan, the place uncommon earth mining has been thriving for the previous decade.

“We in contrast that with the concentrations we discovered within the Kok River, and we discovered that it has an excellent correlation,” Tanapon stated.

“Concentrations within the Kok River might be attributed about 60 to 70 p.c … [to] uncommon earth mining,” he added.

The presence of uncommon earth mines alongside the Kok River in Myanmar was first uncovered by the Shan Human Rights Basis in Might.

Satellite tv for pc photographs obtainable on Google Earth confirmed two new mine websites contained in the UWSA’s enclave on the Thai border developed over the previous one to 2 years – one on the western slope of the river, one other on the east.

The muse additionally used satellite tv for pc photographs to determine what it stated are one other 26 uncommon earth mines contained in the UWSA’s enclave subsequent to China.

All however three of these mines have been constructed over the previous few years, and lots of are situated on the headwaters of the Loei River, one more tributary of the Mekong.

Researchers who’ve studied Myanmar’s uncommon earth mining trade say the big, spherical mineral assortment swimming pools seen within the satellite tv for pc photographs give the websites away as uncommon earth mines.

The Shan Human Rights Basis says villagers residing close to the brand new mines in Shan state have additionally informed how staff there are scooping up a pasty white powder from the gathering swimming pools, simply as they’ve seen in on-line movies of the uncommon earth mines additional north in Kachin.

Two men stand inside the collection pool of a rare earths mine in Kachin province, Myanmar, in February 2022. (Global Witness)
Two males stand inside the gathering pool of a uncommon earths mine in Kachin state, Myanmar, in February 2022 [Courtesy of Global Witness]

‘Zero environmental monitoring’

Patrick Meehan, a lecturer on the College of Manchester within the UK who has studied Myanmar’s uncommon earth mines, stated stories rising from Shan state match with what he is aware of of comparable operations in Kachin.

“The way in which firms are likely to function in Myanmar is that there’s zero pre-mining environmental evaluation, zero environmental monitoring, and there are none of these kinds of laws or protections in place,” Meehan stated.

The leaching course of getting used entails pumping chemical compounds into the hillsides to attract the uncommon earth metals out of the rock. That watery combination of chemical compounds and minerals is then pumped out of the bottom and into the gathering swimming pools, the place the uncommon earths are then separated and gathered up.

With out cautious consideration to maintaining all the pieces contained at a mine, stated Meehan, the dangers of contaminating native rivers and groundwater could possibly be excessive.

Uncommon earth mines are located near rivers due to the big volumes of water wanted for pumping the extractive chemical compounds into the hills, he stated.

The contaminated water is then typically pumped again into the river, he added, whereas the groundwater polluted by the leaching can find yourself within the river as nicely.

“There may be undoubtedly scope for that,” stated Meehan.

He and others have tracked the impact such mines have already had in Kachin – the place a whole lot of mining websites now dot the state’s border with China – from once-teeming streams now barren of fish to rice stalks yielding fewer grains and livestock falling in poor health and dying after ingesting from native creeks.

In a 2024 report, the environmental group World Witness known as the fallout from Kachin’s mining increase “devastating”.

Ben Hardman, Mekong authorized director for the US advocacy group EarthRights Worldwide, stated locals in Kachin have additionally informed his staff about mineworkers dying in unusually excessive numbers.

The fear now, he provides, is that Shan state and the neighbouring nations into which Myanmar’s rivers circulation will undergo the identical destiny as has Kachin, particularly if the mine websites proceed to multiply as international demand for uncommon earth minerals grows.

“There’s an extended historical past of uncommon earth mining inflicting severe environmental harms which are very long-term, and with fairly egregious well being implications for communities,” Hardman stated.

“That was the case in China within the 2010s, and is the case in Kachin now. And it’s the identical state of affairs now evolving in Shan state, and so we are able to anticipate to see the identical harms,” he added.

‘It’s essential cease it on the supply’

Most, if not all, of the uncommon earths mined in Myanmar are despatched to China to be refined, processed, and both exported or put to make use of in a variety of green-energy and, more and more, army {hardware}.

However, in contrast to China, neither Myanmar, Laos nor Thailand have the delicate processing crops that may remodel uncooked ore into worthwhile materials, in line with SFA (Oxford), a crucial minerals and metals consulting agency.

The Institute for Technique and Coverage-Myanmar, a neighborhood assume tank, says Chinese language customs information additionally present that Myanmar has been China’s fundamental supply of uncommon earths from overseas since at the least 2017, together with a document $1.4bn-worth in 2023.

 

A signboard at the Thai village of Sop Ruak on the Mekong river in the Golden Triangle region where the borders of Thailand, Laos and Myanmar meet January 14, 2012. The murder of 13 Chinese sailors last October on the Mekong was the deadliest attack on Chinese nationals overseas in modern times and highlights the growing presence of China in the Golden Triangle, the opium-growing region straddling Myanmar, Laos and Thailand. Picture taken January 14, 2012. To match Special Report MEKONG-CHINA/MURDERS REUTERS/Sukree Sukplang (THAILAND - Tags: CIVIL UNREST MARITIME POLITICS BUSINESS)
A signboard on the Thai village of Sop Ruak on the Mekong River the place the borders of Thailand, Laos and Myanmar meet [File: Sukree Sukplang/Reuters]

Myanmar’s exports of uncommon earth minerals have been rising similtaneously China was putting powerful new curbs on mining them at residence, after witnessing the environmental harm it was doing to its personal communities. Shopping for the minerals from Myanmar has allowed China to outsource a lot of the issue.

That’s the reason many are blaming not solely the mine operators and the UWSA for the environmental fallout from Myanmar’s mines, however China.

The UWSA couldn’t be reached for remark, and neither China’s Ministry of Overseas Affairs nor its embassy in Myanmar replied to Al Jazeera’s emails looking for a response.

In a June 8 Fb put up, reacting to stories of Chinese language-run mines in Myanmar allegedly polluting Thai rivers, the Chinese language embassy in Thailand stated all Chinese language firms working overseas needed to comply with native legal guidelines and laws.

The embassy additionally stated China was open to cooperating with Mekong River nations to guard the native surroundings, however gave no particulars on what that may entail.

Thailand has stated it’s working with each China and Myanmar to resolve the issue.

In a bid to sort out the issue, although, the Thai authorities has proposed constructing dams alongside the affected rivers in Chiang Rai province to filter their waters for pollution.

Native politicians and environmentalists query whether or not such dams would work.

Worldwide Rivers’ Pianporn Deetes stated there was no recognized precedent of dams working in such a fashion in rivers on the size of the Mekong and its tributaries.

“If it’s [a] restricted space, a small creek or in a faraway standalone mining space, it may work. It’s not going to work with this worldwide river,” she stated.

Naresuan College’s Tanapon stated he was constructing pc fashions to check whether or not a sequence of cascading weirs – small, dam-like obstacles which are constructed throughout a river to regulate water circulation – may assist.

However he, too, stated such efforts would solely mitigate the issue at finest.

Dams and weirs, Tanapon stated, “can simply decelerate or cut back the impression”.

“It’s essential cease it on the supply,” he added.

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