Monday, August 3, 2009

EPA Issues New Administrative Order for Doe Run Cleanup

On Friday, the EPA issued modified orders to Doe Run, a St. Louis based company, for its efforts on cleaning up lead mine tailings in Leadwood, MO. The modified orders were in response to concerns from area residents about the work being done by Doe Run to clean up the site in Leadwood.

We have previously written about the community concern regarding Doe Run’s efforts to clean up the site. The community began to go public with their health and lead dust exposure concerns after sludge that was dumped on a mining site to initiate growth spilled onto a landowner’s property. Doe Run has been using sludge, partially treated sewage and animal bones, as fertilizer to begin vegetation growth on the tainted areas. The sludge that spilled onto a landowner’s property was a large amount of animal bones and other trash from a Farmington sale barn.

The EPA order mandates that Doe Run submit a new sludge management plan by August 21. The order also requires that Doe Run finish its work at Leadwood by Sept. 30, 2010. Also under the new administrative order, Doe Run is forbidden from using materials containing animal bones or carcasses at the site as fertilizer.

In 1992, the EPA declared six mine tailing piles in St. Francois County as part of a federal Superfund cleanup project. The piles are leftovers from historic lead mining in an area known as the “Old Lead Belt.” For more than a decade, Doe Run has led the cleanup efforts. In addition to Leadwood, other piles are located in Bonne Terre, Desloge, and Park Hills.


For more information, see the article at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch at:
http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/sciencemedicine/story/57FC3102B84A2F488625760500025FB2?OpenDocument

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posted by Colleen at 7:06 AM

Friday, July 24, 2009

St. Louis Based Doe Run Co. Being Investigated by Missouri Attorney General for Environmental Cleanup Efforts


Doe Run Co., a St. Louis based corporation, is being investigated by the Missouri Attorney General’s office for its cleanup of mine tailings in St. Francois County. Residents of Leadwood, Missouri have complained about Doe Run’s efforts to clean up six piles of mine tailings as part of the Big River Mine Tailings/St. Joe Minerals Corp. Superfund project.

Most of the complaints concern the adequacy of Doe Run’s work in removing lead contaminated soil in the area as well as the company’s use of biosolids and sludge to promote vegetation growth on the cleaned soil. Biosolids are treated sewage sludge that can be used as fertilizer. For example, the company has recently deposited a collection of cow bones and ear tags on a person’s property to help begin vegetation growth on that property.

Residents of Leadwood have become so concerned with the cleanup process that they have contacted environmental activist Erin Brockovich, who has become well known for her activism since the 2000 movie bearing her name was released. Brockovich has since launched an investigation and sent Robert Bowcock, her head environmental investigator, to Leadwood on Monday to hold a community meeting. Bowcock told the community Monday that Doe Run’s clean-up efforts have actually worsened the contamination for the city, because through the clean up, Doe Run has exposed the residents to lead dust.

Doe Run’s cleanup work is being overseen by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). EPA officials have stated that they have approved the use of biosolids at both the Leadwood and Desloge, MO clean up sites. They also said that material from a portable toilet company is used at the Desloge pile and the primary source for the material at the Leadwood pile is the Rock Creek Sewer District in Jefferson County.

Schlichter, Bogard & Denton is currently representing the plaintiffs in a lawsuit against Doe Run Co. for its alleged contamination of a town in Peru.

For more information, see the St. Louis Post-Dispatch article at:
http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/sciencemedicine/story/13BAA7E5B8240094862575FD0007A66A?OpenDocument

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posted by Colleen at 8:08 AM

Friday, May 29, 2009

Doe Run Company may lose control of the La Oroya smelter

Under Peruvian law, there is a procedure called "restructuring of assets", by which creditors of a company can ask the Peruvian agency, INDECOPI (a self-governing body parallel to the judiciary but under the administrative arena) can request restructuring of the company and seek to be appointed to a board of creditors that will administer the company that is declared to be restructuring.

Generally, the largest creditors are companies related to the company ‘in restructuring” and are those who comprise the board of creditors, ie, they continue to administer the company.

Yesterday the Peruvian Government issued an emergency ordinance which changes the rules of the board, and establishes that related companies that cannot be part of the board of creditors and shall not vote on the management restructuring.

This new rule is rumored to be directed at the Doe Run Company, a St. Louis, Missouri-based company which owns a lead smelter and refinery in La Oroya, Peru. Under Doe Run's ownership of this metallurgical complex, La Oroya has become officially one of the 10 most polluted places on earth. Nearly 100% of the children of La Oroya have blood lead levels that exceed the level considered hazardous by world standards, including those of the CDC and the World Health Organization. The Doe Run Company, in turn, is owned by New York-based Renco Group, whose owner is Ira Rennert. Rennert and the Renco group have been responsible for the pollution of various sites in the United States.

The emergency degree issued yesterday by the Peruvian government suggests that the US-based Doe Run Company may lose control of the Peruvian complex. The following is an article (translated into English) that appeared in the Peruvian newspaper, El Comercio, yesterday.

NEW RULES OF THE GAME FOR LA OROYA

Doe Run Smelter may not manage the company

The protagonists in the difficult situation of Doe Run, the Government, the company in question, and the mineral suppliers, are still playing, slowly, their chips. The last move made yesterday, by the Government, was to issue an emergency decree modifying the conditions for companies that might enter into a restructuring process, which could be precisely the case for Doe Run.

The mining company, owner of the smelter and refinery in La Oroya, maintains a debt of more than $100 million with its providers of concentrates and $20 million with others companies that provide it services. However, the principle debt is to its American parent, Doe Run Resources (Renco Group), to which it owes $156 million.

Creditors of the mining company were fearful that the Renco Group would request the insolvency of Doe Run Peru before Indecopi. According to the amount of debt, this allows new control of the company through a board of creditors that are appointed to administer the company.

Emergency Decree 61-2009, issued yesterday, decreed that creditors considered related to the debtor may not request the insolvency of the company or vote at a creditors’ meeting, the body that administers the company in restructuring.

The minister of Energy and Mines, Pedro Sanchez, said that this rule has not been given specifically for the Doe Run case. He argued that this is a generic standard, because in a crisis situation many companies seek restructuring before Indecopi.

However, several government sources indicated that this was a provision designed to prevent Doe Run from “declaring insolvency, taking the money itself, and leaving.”

Executives of the mining company analyzed the scope of the decree yesterday afternoon. The manager of community relations and current spokesman for Doe Run, Jesus Perez, said that they were evaluating the issue, without giving further details.

SPANISH STANDARD

Hugo Silva Quintanta, bankruptcy specialist and partner of Rodriguez, Diaz, and Medrano, explained that the Government’s emergency decree is no an isolated rule, as this applied in Spain.

“It is because in many cases, the related creditors hinder the process, impede restructuring, or generate fictitious restructurings,” said Silva Quintana.

Fernando Martinon, partner of Muniz, was against the rule because it cuts illegitimately into the rights of the related companies. He said that, regardless of the Doe Run issue, there exist companies and shareholders that present capital to related companies, which lose their political rights, since they could not vote at a meeting of creditors.

GOING TO INDECOPI?

For Doe Run to enter into any restructuring, each company to which the company owes 50 UIT (S/ .177.500) can ask for a declaration of insolvency before Indecopi.

Ricardo Trovarelli, general manager of Cormin, one of the creditor companies of Doe Run, said that they were not interested in declaring Run Peru insolvent because it would virtually freeze their debt.

He also said that creditors would have to put money back into the smelter and refinery to get it on tract. “The debt would be charged when the company profits, it would take a long time,” he said.

Jose Miguel Morales, legal representative of the Buenaventura Mining Company, which is also a creditor of Doe Run Peru, said that the mineral providers would meet with Doe Run Peru next Monday, but will define the agenda today.

Minister Pedro Sanchez said that so far, they have not received any proposal to modify the Environmental Management and Adaptation Program (PAMA) of Doe Run, whose completion is due in October. The minister that he expects to receive today Doe Run’s proposal to become operational again.

MORE INFORMATION

The two problems of the mining company:

The mining company faces two problems.

  • The first is the financial aspect: it has debts, and the banks are unwilling to provide working capital.
  • The second problem is the performance of its PAMA, which requires investing $70 million. According to the mining company, it can not fund it still.
To see the Spanish version of the article, click here: http://www.elcomercio.com.pe/impresa/notas/doe-run-podria-dejar-administrar-fundicion/20090529/293114

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posted by Beth Wilkins at 11:31 AM

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