TED Case Studies


Chile Copper Exports


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          CASE NUMBER:          105    
          CASE MNEMONIC:      COPPER   
          CASE NAME:          Copper Exports from Chile         


A. IDENTIFICATION 1. The Issue Few people would think that a nation as small as Chile would be so rich in natural resources. The country measures no more than 180 kilometers between its Pacific coast and its eastern frontier. Its area of 756,626 square kilometers makes it smaller than any of the South American republics except Uruguay, Paraguay, Ecuador, and the Guyanas. Of the thin country's resources, none are more valuable than its copper mines, which contribute handsomely to Chile's GNP. The demand for copper on the world market has contributed to its advancement towards many bi-lateral agreements and regional trade pacts like the GATT, MERCOSUR, and NAFTA. The need for copper was particularly evident during the Vietnam War, when the metal accounted for eighty percent of Chile's export earnings. Chile's eagerness to meet investors' and nations' needs for copper has created several environmental problems in the area. The smelting of the copper ore at the factories emits arsenic and carbon-monoxide which pollutes the air and water near the mines. The parties at risk include: fishermen and farmers who live and work near the port Caldera, marine life and animals that live in the area, other people who live and work in the area (including the miners). 2. Description Copper has played a large role in the Chilean economy since at least 1825, when British and Americans were already competing with other foreign investors to control Chile's copper and silver market. By 1835, Chile was exporting 12,700 tons of copper a year, much of it to the United States. Copper accounted for fifty-five per cent of the country's economy by 1860. Chile became highly dependent upon its copper exports. After the War of the Pacific (1879-83), the quantity of copper that Chile mined continued to skyrocket. Although the demand for copper put Chile way ahead of other nations in the region, its increasing dependence on copper put it at the mercy of the world market. When copper prices dropped or industrial slumps hit Europe, Chile's economy went into a tailspin. The impact of copper production in Chile on the country's environment is real and is growing at an alarming rate. Most threatened is the atmosphere in immediate vicinity of the copper mines -- which are located in the northern areas of the country. The production of copper is a long and dangerous process. Workers heat copper at high temperatures as many as fifteen times before the metal is ready for export. The refiners at the factories emit high quantities of arsenic and carbon-monoxide. Local farming and fishing communities fear that loading operations in Port Caldera will pollute the bay. Some of these farmers and fishermen have already defeated COLDECO, the state owned mining company, in court. To comply with environmental regulations Chuquicamata, the largest copper mine in the world, closed its furnaces for a month in July, 1994. The miners who work in copper mines like Chuquicamata and La Escondida, are at risk because of the fumes they inhale while they are at work. Farmers and animals in the area are also in danger because the smelting of copper releases noxious chemicals that seep into the soil. 3. Related Cases CHILE case CHILEAIR case GEDDES case TRAIL case Keyword Clusters (1): Trade Product = COPPER (2): Bio-geography = DRY (3): Environmental Problem = Pollution Land [POLL] 4. Draft Author: Jay Krasnow B. LEGAL Cluster 5. Discourse and Status: DISagreement and INProgress While the government and legal system has forced environmental regulations upon the copper mines, COLDECO officials admit that copper production is damaging the environment. One official announced that COLDECO is negotiating with the Chilean government to implement a pollution control plan. Since most copper mines in Chile are state owned, ideas such as "accepting government regulations" and "negotiating with the government" seems paradoxical. Copper will continue to be an important part of Chile's economy, so there is little doubt that concerns about copper production's affect on the environment will continue. 6. Forum and Scope: Chile and Unilateral 7. Decision Breadth: 3 The inhabitants the towns near copper mines include farmers, fishermen, vendors, small shop owners, copper mine workers, and small groups of indigenous peoples. Though many of them are not actively participation in the case (or even aware of it), the pollution in the air and sky has the potential to affect all who come in contact it. COLDECO is in the process of negotiating environmental regulations with the Chilean government. Implementing legal and judicial regulations in Chuquicamata alone will cost COLDECO over $300 million in one decade. Because regulations forced Coldeco to close down Chuquicamata for one month in 1994, its yearly output fell 40,000 tons. These environmental regulations are no doubt costly for COLDECO. Since COLDECO is state owned, the government will also lose money. It is unlikely that compliance with the regulations will affect the workers who will breath in the fume daily. Compliance by COLDECO may prevent contamination from spreading to Port Caldera, which is important to farmers, fishermen, and the marine life in the bay. If Chile joins the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), it would be expected to honor the provisions of its environmental side-agreement. NAFTA's environmental side- agreement provides a forum for arbitration of environmental disputes. 8. Legal Standing: LAW Both the judicial and governmental intervention were implemented at the national level. Since Chile is involved with many multi-lateral trade pacts, environmental disputes -- including pollution caused by copper processing -- may be brought before dispute councils. C. GEOGRAPHIC FILTERS 9. Geographic Locations The geographic domain is South America and specifically the Andean mountains/Atacama Desert respectively, but environmental disputes directly affect nations that purchase copper. A. Geographic Domain: South America [SAMER] B. Geographic Site: ANDES C. Geographic Impact: CHILE 10. Sub-National Factors: NO 11. Type of Habitat: DRY D. TRADE Clusters 12. Type of Measure: Regulatory Standard [REGSTD] COLDECO has agreed to spend between $250 million and $300 million over the next decade to control gas emissions at Chuquicamata alone. In 1992, COLDECO spent US $13 million to conduct research in many areas, including environmental management. 13. Direct vs. Indirect Impacts: INDirect COLDECO's copper production remains an important part of Chile's economy. Chile will remain a leader in the export of copper, but compliance with environmental regulations will be costly for COLDECO. As previously mentioned, COLDECO will spend between US $250 million to control copper factories' gas emissions that are damaging the ozone layer and increase the risk of global warming. In 1987, Chile became one of one-hundred and thirty-six nations to sign the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer (see MONTREAL case). The summit's objective was "to protect the ozone layer by taking precautionary measures to control the emissions of substance that deplete it." Sixteen other Latin American nations -- including Cuba - - signed the protocol. 14. Relation of Measure to Environmental Impact: MEDium Government regulations require that copper factories take measures to reduce pollution emission. Figures regarding the extent to which environmental regulations will cost COLDECO in lost revenues are not available. a. Directly Related to Product: NO b. Indirectly Related to Product: YES COPPER c. Not Related to Product: NO d. Related to Process: YES Pollution Land [POLL] 15. Trade Production Identification: COPPER 16. Economic Data In 1990, copper made up half of Chile's exports and 15 percent of its GDP (see also CHILE case for discussion of the country's wood products). Though the Chilean Copper Worker's Union had 19,000 members in 1993, COLDECO employed on 5,000 workers. Chile produced 1.94 million tons of copper in 1992. Data for 1992 is not available, but in 1994, copper cost at least $2,359.50 a ton. The copper industry has contributed US $15 billion to Chilean Treasury between the years 1984 and 1994. 17. Impact of Measure on Trade Competitiveness: LOW Coldeco is spending US $250 million to control factory emissions over the next decade. 18. Industry Sector: MINeral 19. Exporters and Importers: CHILE and USA E. ENVIRONMENTAL Clusters 20. Environmental Problem Type: MANY The arsenic and carbon-monoxide which the copper factories emit not only endanger the animals which inhabit the areas that have been polluted, but also is damaging the atmosphere. 21. Name, Type, and Diversity of Species Name: Many Type: Many Diversity: 1,269 higher plants per 10,00 km/sq (Chile) The following animal and fish species live near the Port Caldera or copper mines like Chuquicamata. Animals: Alpaca: (Lama pacos) Guanaco: (Lama guanicoe) Llama: (Lama glama) Vicuna: (Vicugna vicugna) Fish: Albacoro: (Thunnus alalunga) Anchoveta: (Engraulis ringens) Bonito (Atlantic): (Sarda sarda) Erizo (Chilaen): (Loxechinus albus) Caballa (Atlantic): (Scomber scombras) Cholga: (Aulacomya ater) Cojinobas (del norte): (Seriolella spp.) Jurel (chilean): (Trachurus murphyi) Lenguago (Pacific): (Lepidopsetta bilineata) Macha: (Mesodesma donacium) Piure: (Pyura chinensis) Pulpo: (Octopus vularis) Sardina araucana: (Strangomera bentincki) 22. Resource Impact and Effect: HIGH and MEDium Although Chuquicamata is the largest copper mine in the world, production peaked in 1990. Since then copper production at Chuquicamata has declined. Sight managers are searching for new locations to mine copper. COLDECO spent five million dollars in just in 1990 to drill new pits on the north and south sides of Chuquicamata. Opening new mines will spread the pollution problem other nearby areas (see CHILEAIR and CHILE cases). 23. Urgency and Lifetime: MEDium and 100s of years The average life expectancy in Chile was 68.5 for a male and 75.6 for female in 1994. Because their work damages their respiratory system, copper mine workers risk sickness and early death. The life spans of the animals and marine life that inhabit the area varies from species to species. There seem to be little talk about the extinction of these species as a result of the copper factories' pollution. 24. Substitutes: Biodegradable [BIODG] Although it is highly likely that synthetic copper can be produced, it would not solve the problem because copper's value is intrinsic. Synthetic copper would be worthless to investors and considered a cheap toy by nations like the United States. Fiber optic cables can be used as a substitute for copper in some instances, but the demand for copper will remain for a long time to come. F. OTHER Factors 25. Culture: NO 26. Trans-border Issues: NO 27. Rights: YES One source calls copper miners "an elite group with relatively handsome wage and benefit packages." Nevertheless, Chilean mining jobs have been known for their long hours and low pay. Coal miners worked 12 hour days until the late 1960's and still get paid an average of US $8 a day. Mining conditions are typically dirty and the workers lungs often suffer from inhaling chemicals like arsenic and carbon-monoxide. Coal miners still work six or seven day weeks. Since the arsenic and carbon monoxide seeps into farmers' land tracts, they and their clients are in danger of suffering from illnesses like arsenic poisoning. 28. Relevant Literature Asheshov, Nicholas. South Pacific Mail Chile Inc. Sourcebook 1994, The: The User's Guide To business in Chile. Santiago, Chile: The South Pacific Mail SRL, 1994. Black, Jan Knippers, ed. Latin America: Its Problems and Promise: A Multidisciplinary Introduction, 2nd edition. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1991. Bosworth, Barry P., Dornbusch, Rudiger, and Laban, Raul. Chilean Economy: Policy Lessons and Challenges, The. Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institute, 1994. Falcoff, Mark. Modern Chile 1970-1989: A Critical History. New Brunswick, U.S.A.: Transaction Publishers, 1991. Krasnow, Jay. Travel Journal, January 13, 1993-June 1, 1993: Chile Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, and the islands of Chilo­ and Floranopolis. Loveman, Brian. Chile: The Legacy of Hispanic Capitalism, 2nd edition. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988. Perrottet, Tony, ed. Insight Guides: Chile. Singapore: Hofer Press Pte. Ltd Publications, 1991 TURIS TEL '91 norte. Chile: Compania de Telefonos de Chile, 1990. References

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1/11/97