Close Menu
Metals Weekly
    TRENDING -
    • Economist Mark Thornton warns of 150-year market peak, calls Fed nomination a ‘hit job’ on precious metals
    • Idaho sees a ‘massive influx’ of mining projects. Here’s why
    • Bill to ban mining on New Zealand public conservation land sparks national debate
    • BlackRock sees merit in large scale mining M&A
    • US prepares to auction leases for seabed mining blocks in federal waters
    • NOAA says deep-sea mining “not going to wait” for environmental impact certainty
    • Mining giant polluted Quebec waters for over a decade before $100M fine. What took so long?
    • Gold drives a new cycle of investments in mining in Brazil
    Metals Weekly
    • Home
    • Critical Materials
    • Environment
    • Global Policy
    • Mining
    Metals Weekly
    Home»Environment»Illegal gold mining clears 140,000 hectares of Peruvian Amazon

    Illegal gold mining clears 140,000 hectares of Peruvian Amazon

    Environment 4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Illegal gold mining clears 140,000 hectares of Peruvian Amazon
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Armed criminal groups tear down precious rainforest to capitalise on record gold prices, report finds.

    An illegal gold rush has cleared 140,000 hectares of rainforest in the Peruvian Amazon and is accelerating as foreign, armed groups move into the region to profit from record gold prices, according to a report.

    About 540 square miles of land have been cleared for mining in the South American country since 1984, and the environmental destruction is spreading rapidly across the country, Monitoring of the Andean Amazon Project (MAAP) and its Peruvian partner organisation, Conservación Amazónica, found.

    The gold rush is also poisoning its waterways. Illegal miners use dredges – floating machines that chew up and spit out riverbeds – leaving the toxic mercury used to extract gold from sediment in their wake.

    Ultra-high resolution aerial images allowed MAAP, part of Amazon Conservation, to identify dredges alongside deforestation for the first time, enabling them to identify goldminers and revealing that the environmental crisis once confined to the south of the country was creeping north.

    “We used to only see it in the Madre de Dios region but now we’re seeing it everywhere”, said MAAP’s director, Matt Finer.

    The price of gold topped $4,000 for the first time this week on the international markets as global anxiety increased about financial fragility. Indigenous groups have sounded the alarm that as the price of soars, armed groups were increasingly tearing down their forests and poisoning their rivers in pursuit of the precious metal.

    MAAP’s aerial images show that once dense swathes of green jungle are being transformed into lifeless moonscapes of grey earth pocked with stagnant pools of green water.

    “This little square is just a tiny sample,” Finer says, pointing to a small section of the vast red patchwork of deforestation mapped in the report. “Imagine this multiplied to 140,000 hectares.”

    The mercury residues build up in fish and pass to the people who eat them, leading to neurological and developmental problems such as birth defects and learning difficulties.

    A recent study of riverside communities in Peru’s northernmost region of Loreto found the median level of mercury was nearly four times the World Health Organization’s recommended limit.

    MAAP’s analysis found that 225 rivers and streams have been affected, with 989 dredges spotted in Loreto since 2017 – including 275 this year alone on the Nanay River, a tributary of the Amazon that is the lifeblood of ecosystems and dozens of Indigenous communities.

    “They are poisoning our rivers – it’s the water that we drink,” said Roberto Tafur Shupingahua, a representative of several riverside communities in Loreto.

    Shupingahua said local communities began blocking miners from advancing up the River Tigre in Loreto 40 days ago, leading to gunfights with armed intruders. “We have no choice but to fight back but we are alone. The state is nowhere to be seen,” he said, his voice raising in anger.

    Mining remains concentrated in the Madre de Dios region in southern Peru but new hotspots are emerging farther north in Loreto, Amazonas, Huánuco, Pasco and Ucayali.

    They are small but once mining is established it could expand quickly, Finer said, adding that the report was a glimpse into what was happening across the rest of the Amazon.

    “This is the first time we’ve been able to look in this detail at a country but I think in Brazil, Bolivia and Colombia we are going to see exactly the same thing,” he said.

    MAAP’s report showed more dredges appearing on Peru’s jungle frontiers with Bolivia, Brazil and Colombia.

    With gold prices surpassing $4,000 an ounce, foreign, armed groups are increasingly venturing across the border into Peru’s lawless jungles where local authorities are doing little to stop them, says Bram Ebus, a criminologist and consultant for the International Crisis Group.

    Criminal networks, including the Comandos de la Frontera from Colombia and Comando Vermelho from Brazil, are increasingly active across the border.

    “International crime networks trafficking cocaine and laundering profits through illegal gold mining – now with peak prices providing hefty returns – are combined with a government in Lima that has not been a serious obstacle against organised crime,” Ebus said.

    The Andean Group – a political coalition of South American countries – told Peru on Tuesday to get serious about illegal mining or it could face economic sanctions.

    But Finer said: “Gold is just so profitable right now. I don’t see any signs of prices going down, so it’s probably going to get worse before it gets better.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/oct/08/gold-mining-deforestation-peru-amazon

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Mining giant polluted Quebec waters for over a decade before $100M fine. What took so long?

    Mining, environmental groups shift focus after Senate vote

    Illegal gold mining in Ghana is causing environmental destruction and damaging development

    Don't Miss

    Metals From Copper to Gold Slump as Inflation Fears Roil Markets

    Global Policy 2 Mins Read

    Metals from gold to copper sank in a broad selloff in financial markets amid investor…

    TMC The Metals Moves Toward Commercial Seafloor Production With Allseas Deal

    Prismo Metals Reports Positive Results from Reconnaissance Mapping and Sampling at Silver King Project, Arizona

    TMC scores regulatory win in race to mine Pacific seafloor

    Top Stories

    Anger grows after China’s deadliest coal mining disaster in years

    Arctic Mine gains FAST-41 permitting status

    Scientists Discover a New Way To Control Metals at the Atomic Scale

    New form of aluminum could replace precious metals for a fraction of the cost

    Our Picks

    Zambians pay price amid Copperbelt mining boom

    Zambia says privacy, minerals concerns stall US health aid deal

    Zambia mine regulator lifts suspension of operations at Mopani’s Mufulira mine

    Don't Miss

    Men’s Tennis Wraps Up Fall Play at Navy Invitational

    South Africa company responsible for lead poisoning in Zambia, rights group says

    Donald Trump Exempts Gold, Uranium, Other Metals From Global Tariffs

    Weekly Newsletter

    Subscribe to our weekly Newsletter to keep up to date on the latest news in the metals, minerals and mining industry

    Copyright © 2025 - Metals Weekly. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.