Mercury rising: How does gold mining in Ghana impact health … – Colorado State University
Associate Professor Heidi Hausermann (second from left) and Emmanuel Effah, University of Mines and Technology, Ghana (left), Bernadette Atosona, PhD student at University of Ghana (third from left), and another colleague speak with a hard rock miner about mercury use in northern Ghana. All photos courtesy of Hausermann
Associate Professor of Geography Heidi Hausermann and colleagues have won a $1.537 million National Science Foundation grant to study the health, social and environmental effects of rapidly expanding, small-scale gold mining and mercury pollution in Ghana and beyond. The award, which will fund a five-year research project, marks the first NSF Dynamics of Integrated Socio-Environmental Systems grant led by a CSU researcher.
“DISES grants offer a really unique opportunity to unpack human-environment relationships, and they are very competitive,” said Hausermann, the grant’s primary investigator. “Most people have to apply several times before they are successful, so we were not at all expecting to get this on a first go.”
The grant and project include collaborators from Michigan State University, Harvard University, University of Iowa and University of Mines and Technology, Ghana.
Twenty-first century gold rush
Small-scale and artisanal mining encompasses more informal mining operations — either individuals or companies — typically working on small concessions (25 acres). The practice might sound low impact, but small-scale mining uses heavy equipment and toxic, elemental mercury to amalgamate gold from mineral deposits and sands. In Ghana and elsewhere, miners mix elemental liquid mercury with gold deposits and then burn off the mercury using kerosene torches to separate out the gold. The toxic gases can move into the air and atmosphere and settle into land and water, making the consequences scattered and insidious — especially during boom times.
A miner points to mercury-gold amalgam.
Following the 2008 financial crisis, gold prices skyrocketed, and small-scale mining expanded around the world, particularly in mineral-rich countries in Asia, South America and Africa, including in Ghana — formerly a British colony called Gold Coast. New waves of foreign mining investment and activity bring economic opportunity but also new health and environmental problems in rural communities.
Hausermann first traveled to Ghana as a postdoctoral researcher, amid the latest gold rush, as part of a project studying the emergence of a necrotizing skin disease called Buruli ulcer in mining areas. Hausermann completed ethnographic interviews over two years to better understand the spatial dynamics of the disease. Through interviews with rural community members, she realized Buruli ulcer was just one consequence among more widespread and mostly un-reported and underreported mining impacts affecting many more people – including illnesses and environmental losses potentially tied to mercury pollution.
She expanded her own research in Ghana to study the political and economic factors driving mining and its pollution legacy in rural areas. She also began assembling an interdisciplinary team that could collectively assess the geographic and biogeochemical dimensions of mercury emissions and their impacts.
Mercury rising as critical threat
Part of the study will include sampling crops, soil, water and air at sites with different climates and levels of mining activity across Ghana to better understand how elemental mercury moves through the air, ground and waterways from mining areas.
Small-scale mining is now recognized as the number-one emitter of atmospheric mercury around the world. Mercury pollution is especially alarming for public health and the environment. Mercury is highly toxic and can cause brain bleeding and acute illness from direct or continued contact, but it is also persistent and bio-accumulative, meaning it builds up in human bodies through meat and plants we eat and can last in the environment for decades. Mercury exposure has been linked to a range of neurological, cardiovascular and other illnesses as well as stunted fetal development and developmental delays and disorders.
“We know artisanal and small-scale gold mining represent the largest source of mercury pollution globally,” said Jacqueline Gerson, assistant professor at Michigan State University. Gerson studies biogeochemistry and is a member of the NSF DISES grant team. “Yet, we know less about what happens to this mercury once it is released. Does it remain in the local or regional environment, posing risk to local and national communities or does it enter the global mercury pool where it can be deposited in countries far from its source?”
Gerson’s previous studies in the Peruvian Amazon showed high levels of atmospheric mercury in forests near mining areas suggesting pollution doesn’t just move into the air and away from local areas. A main question for Hausermann, Gerson, and their team is whether vegetation in Ghana — particularly commonly grown crops such as cocoyam, plantain and maize — also absorb elevated levels of mercury and what environmental conditions are promoting this accumulation of mercury, as a result.
Seeking answers for rural communities
The DISES grant, “Investigating mercury biogeochemical cycling via mixed methods in complex artisanal gold mining landscapes and implications for community health,” will support five years of research to help answer these looming questions through socioeconomic, environmental and biogeochemical studies and modeling.
“Geographers are taught to think about human-environment systems and interactions, and a lot of us are also trained in mixed [quantitative and qualitative study] methods,” Hausermann said. “So, we understand social and ecological methods and how they work together, but this project will also produce maps of mercury risk on the landscape, so it’s also very spatial work.”
Gerson will lead efforts to sample crops, soil and water and set up passive air samplers at three sites with different climates and levels of mining activity across Ghana to better understand how elemental mercury moves through the air, ground and waterways from mining areas. Elsie Sunderland, professor of Environmental Chemistry at Harvard, will complement Gerson’s work and lead efforts to model biogeochemical pathways of mercury pollution. By measuring and tracing mercury levels found in crops grown across the country, the team can also see how different environmental factors influence plants’ uptake of mercury. The researchers also plan to map just how far atmospheric mercury from mining is spreading from source areas.
An example of recycled elemental mercury settles at the bottom of a soda bottle.
“We want to understand what environmental conditions are promoting mercury accumulation in foodstuff, in this case, local agriculture, and what foods are higher levels than others,” Gerson said. “Our goal is not to criminalize artisanal or small-scale mining — which is an important livelihood for many people — nor to change local diets. It is to inform better decision-making about where people are mining and growing foods as well as to improve global mercury atmospheric models.”
Hausermann will continue her data collection through interviews and surveys in rural communities, identifying miners’ practices and use of elemental mercury, tallying reports of illness and environmental loss, and assessing knowledge and perceptions of the risks of mercury pollution.
Bernadette Atosona, Ph.D student in Environmental Science at University of Ghana, Heidi Hausermann, Colorado State University, and Emmanuel Effah, University of Mines and Technology, Ghana
“I suspect miners understand the risks of handling mercury directly because they feel it and have described headaches, insomnia and other symptoms after using mercury in the past,” she said. “But I expect family members, women and others to know less, and miners might not know that family members or neighbors can be exposed to mercury. People want to live in healthy environments and keep their families safe, and we’re looking forward to starting a conversation about how to limit mercury exposure in these communities.”
Other members of the grant team include Bernadette Atosona, an environmental science Ph.D. student at University of Ghana who has worked with Hausermann since 2010 and brings experience and knowledge with environmental chemistry and qualitative research methods. Richard Amankwah and Emmanuel Effah, of University of Mines and Technology in Tarkwa, Ghana, are experts on the country’s mining history and current operations. Edith Parker, dean of the College of Public Health at the University of Iowa, is a community-health expert.
“No one has all the skills or knowledge to do something like this alone, so we really have to bring our ideas to the table while being open about ethics, change and innovation,” Hausermann said. “It’s the perfect team for this.
“It’s exciting because it has the potential to make some big contributions to our understanding of where mercury goes, and how it may put rural people — who have already been burdened with other impacts of mining — most at risk.”
Southern Africa
Bezuidenhout ruled out of South Africa tour – NZC
WHITE FERNS wicket-keeper batter Bernadine Bezuidenhout has been ruled out of the tour of South Africa after being diagnosed with post-viral Pericarditis.
Bezuidenhout was assessed by the team doctor in Johannesburg and underwent specialist scans that revealed the condition.
The doctor has recommended that Bezuidenhout limit physical activity for 4-6 weeks until she is fully recovered.
Bezuidenhout has been cleared to fly and will return to New Zealand next week following a short stay with family in South Africa.
WHITE FERNS head coach Ben Sawyer said the team was disappointed for Bezuidenhout.
“We’re really feeling for Bernie,” he said.
“She’s a really important part of our team so we’re all disappointed she won’t be able to take part in this tour.
“She’s a strong personality and we know she will be fully committed to her recovery and we’ll be supporting her however we can.
“We’re very grateful for the doctors here in South Africa who have taken great care of Bernie and supported her through what has been a challenging few days.”
Auckland HEARTS wicket-keeper batter Izzy Gaze who was named in the ODI squad will now remain on tour for the T20Is.
West Africa
AFiGF 2023: Nigeria, Ghana, other African countries to collaborate … – Daily Post Nigeria
Nigeria, Ghana and about ten other African countries have vowed to raise the bar in the area of digital inclusion, enhanced security of cyberspace and innovation.
Representatives of these countries spoke to journalists at the end of the Africa Internet Governance Forum (AfIGF) organised by the Nigerian government and the United Nations and hosted by NCC in Abuja with the theme: “Transforming Africa’s Digital Landscape: Empowering Inclusion, Security and Innovation.”
The Executive Vice-Chairman (EVC), Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), Prof. Umar Danbatta said the Commission would ensure that the bar is raised in the area of digital inclusion, cybersecurity and innovation.
Danbatta said in today’s Nigeria the financial inclusion strategy of the Federal Government was telco-driven.
According to him, the idea behind leveraging the telecommunications infrastructure strategy is because of the pervasive nature of telecommunications infrastructure.
“Before the mobile money penetration was 1 per cent but not anymore because after the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), gave licences to four of our network operators.
“As we speak today, the Payment Service Bank (PSB), the digital financial inclusion index, has risen to about 70 per cent.
He reiterated that the Unsupplementary Structured Service Data (USSD) code which drives transactions in the banking sector was made available by NCC.
“Nowadays Nigerians do transfers without having to go to the banking halls to fill tellers.which used to be the way we are doing it before.
“This important intervention is provided in all the six geopolitical zones of the country. It is a continuous exercise and intervention.
He stated that as a Commission, NCC has a number of initiatives driving the national system of innovation.
He said that NCC empowers the younger ones, the middle aged and mature Nigerians outside these brackets, to innovate by providing Interventions of computer systems and mifi.
About the enhanced security of cyberspace, he said the NCC has the Nigerian Computer Emergency Response Team (NCERT).
The EVC said this provides advice on how telecommunication companies can take measures to protect themselves from malicious attacks within cyberspace.
“We even grade the nature of attack to be malicious, light, heavy etc,” Danbatta said.
The Secretary General (AFIGF), Samuel George, member of the Ghanaian Parliament, said it was important to have a unified African cybersecurity approach to an African problem.
George said the African Union (AU) data and policy framework had the synchronised ability to share information with the Nigerians and other African countries.
“Our military and security intelligence that just deals with security, intelligence gathering and all of that should be able to share critical information with the Nigerian military sector.
“If there is a risk that covers both Ghana, Togo, Benin and Nigeria and they do not have similar protocols, then it affects this conversation.
“And that’s why as an African continent we need to ratify this convention because the things that were topical eight years ago in 2015 are mundane now, technology has moved on.
“So we will need to catch up with it,” George said.
On her path, the Chairperson, (AFIGF), Lillian Nalwoga said at the regional level, there have been the Africa cyber security conventions, adding that more countries were needed to be able to ascend.
Nalwoga said without determination, it would be a little bit difficult to be able to address cyber crimes at a regional level.
She also said that African countries need to have some sort of harmonisation of cybersecurity laws in their various countries to aid the fight against cyber crimes.
“We need countries that have not been able to ratify this convention to be able to resolve this and also for countries that are still lagging behind in terms of coming up with the right cybersecurity laws.
“It is not just about cybersecurity. We also need to have countries adopt data protection and privacy laws because it allows the government to do some level of surveillance.
“We need to have cybersecurity laws come up in the same framework as data protection for the rights of the citizens.
“Cybersecurity is important because it protects the citizen from non-state actors themselves, exposes citizens to risk and then from the state itself from surveillance,” she said.
West Africa
Australia edge past PNG to win PM’s XIII clash – NRL.COM
Australia continued their dominance over Papua New Guinea in the annual Prime Minister’s XIII clash on Saturday afternoon, but were made to work for the full 80 minutes in an eventual 30-18 win.
Leading by just six as the closing minutes approached, it was only a Tyrell Sloan try just before full-time that secured victory for the visitors, who made 17 errors across the match and struggled to shake off PNG as a result.
Despite fielding only a handful of players with NRL experience – in comparison to Australia who had eight World Cup winners and 12 players who appeared at Origin level this year in their squad – PNG were right in the contest for the first hour and had Australia sweating before their late flurry of points.
In the end tries to Titans flyer Alofiana Khan-Pereira, Sharks workaholic Cameron McInnes and Sloan got Mal Meninga’s side home, with hooker Ben Hunt among their most impressive players as he pushed his claims for the Kangaroos’ No.9 jersey in next month’s Pacific Championships.
In what was one of their best showings in the end-of-year clash, the hosts got off to a dream start when Kyle Laybutt’s cross-field kick was fumbled by the Australians and Nene Macdonald touched down, sending the packed crowd in Port Moresby into a frenzy of celebration.
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