Beverley uranium mine owner has shocking record

August 10, 2012
Issue 
Photo: Beverley Action

The story behind the corporation that owns the Beverley uranium mine in north-east South Australia is scarcely believable.

Heathgate Resources — a 100%-owned subsidiary of General Atomics (GA) — owns and operates Beverley and has a stake in the adjacent Beverley Four Mile mine. Over the years, GA CEO Neal Blue has had commercial interests in oil, Predator drones, uranium mining, nuclear reactors, cocoa, bananas and real estate.

Radioactive spills and gas leaks at a uranium processing plant in Oklahoma led to the plant’s closure in 1993. The plant was owned by a GA subsidiary, Sequoyah Fuels Corporation, and processed uranium for use in reactors and for use in depleted uranium munitions. A nine-legged frog may have GA to thank for its dexterity.

A government inquiry found that GA had known for years that radioactive material was leaking and that the radioactivity of water around the plant was 35,000 times higher than US laws permitted.

In 1992, a leak at the Oklahoma plant forced the evacuation of a building only two weeks after federal inspectors allowed it to resume operating. Later that year, the company announced the plant would be closed after it had been ordered to temporarily shut down three times in the previous six years.

The shenanigans at the Oklahoma plant — documented by the World Information Service on Energy — include the disposal of low-level radioactive waste by spraying it on company-owned grazing land, and the company’s attempt to reduce the amount of property tax it paid on the grounds that radioactive contamination reduced the value of the land.

Fortune magazine recounts one of the controversies surrounding GA/Heathgate’s uranium ventures in Australia. When uranium prices rose in the mid-2000s, the company was locked into long-term contracts to sell yellowcake from Beverley at earlier, lower prices.

Heathgate devised plans to renegotiate its legally binding contracts. Customers were told that production costs at Beverley were higher than expected, that production was lower than expected, and that a failure to renegotiate contracts would force Heathgate to file for bankruptcy.

However, former employees said Blue had allegedly directed Heathgate to increase its production costs. Customers were not told that bankruptcy was unlikely since GA had agreed to continue providing Heathgate with financial assistance. Two of Heathgate’s Australian directors consulted an attorney who advised them that the plan could be considered a conspiracy to defraud. They left the company.

Exelon, one of Heathgate’s uranium customers, sued. The lawsuit was settled for about $41 million. Because of the higher uranium price, Blue ended up well in front despite the cost of the settlement with Exelon — more than $200 million in front by some estimates. Blue was unrepentant: “It made more sense to, in essence, just pay the fine.”

GA/Heathgate has employed at least one private investigator to infiltrate environment groups in Australia. The infiltrator, known as Mehmet, had previously infiltrated green groups as part of an undercover police operation before he moved into the private sector to set up his own security company, Universal Axiom.

He also provided personal protection to visiting GA executives. When asked about the company’s tactics, a Heathgate spokesperson said the company was privately owned and had a policy of not responding to media questions.

People who worked at Friends of the Earth at the time — around the turn of the century — say they were highly suspicious about Mehmet from the get-go. His activities might have been laughable and pathetic except that he provided exaggerated information to police about the likely attendance at a protest at the Beverley uranium mine in May 2000.

That led to an excessive police presence at the protest and police brutality against environmentalists and local Aboriginal people. An online video clip details this brutality. Heathgate applauded the police action (in a 2000 media release, which is no longer available online). After a 10-year legal case, 10 people were awarded a total of $700,000 damages.

Heathgate’s record at Beverley has been substandard. At least 59 spills have been documented at the mine. The company sells uranium to nuclear weapons states (all of which are in breach of their disarmament obligations under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty), to at least one country with a recent history of secret nuclear weapons research (South Korea), and to countries which refuse to ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty.

Heathgate’s activities at Beverley have been extremely divisive among Adnyamathanha traditional owners. Some Adnyamathanha elders have formed an Elders Group as a separate forum from the Adnyamathanha Traditional Lands Association.

Elder Enice Marsh said: “There have been many attempts over the past 10 years to try and bring greater accountability to what’s happening in native title, and to stop the ongoing assault on our Yarta (country). Many of us have tried with very little resources, limited understanding of the legal system and environmental laws, and despite a mountain of bullying, lies and deceit from mining companies, lawyers, and self-inflated thugs in our own community who dare to call themselves ‘leaders’.”

Is it any wonder that many intelligent, reasonable Australians still hate the uranium mining industry and hate it with a passion?

[Jim Green is the national nuclear campaigner with Friends of the Earth. This article is republished from The Punch with the author’s permission.]

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