The toxic trail of China's coal industry.
Nearly a year ago, the stream that runs through the mining town of Majiapo suddenly turned bright orange. Today it looks like a winding river of Gatorade, cutting through the terraced Chinese countryside.
But it tastes much worse.
“It’s got a strong taste, like ammonia, and it smells like sulfur,” says villager Ma Huiming. “It stains your skin orange.”
Ma says he and the hundreds of other people who live here drink this water and bathe in it. He takes me to the village well beside the river. We peer inside at the orange water. “It’s completely toxic,” Ma says, “But we’re too poor to afford to drink anything else. I worry about what it’ll do to my children, what kind of diseases they’ll get. People who can afford to leave for the city have moved.”
The orange water is caused by acid mine drainage – discharged water from a coal mine – it’s contaminated with sulfuric acid and a range of heavy metals. It’s a problem throughout Shanxi province, which provides a third of China’s coal. Ma says his employer, Yangmei Group, which runs a mine a few miles up the river, is responsible.
So I go there.
I arrive at lunch break – coal miners are outside a canteen eating noodles. When they see a foreigner with a microphone, a yelling match breaks out between workers who begin complaining about the water and workers who warn me to leave. Miner Zhang Quanding shows me his bowl of noodles. “Look at this water!” Zhang yells. “Pigs wouldn’t even drink water like this! I’ve had diarrhea for weeks!”
Zhang says workers have complained to management, but the complaint was ignored. Upon hearing this, the boss emerges from the canteen and yells at Zhang. Another miner shouts: “A true Chinese person wouldn’t talk to a foreign journalist.”
Zhang shoots back: “A true Chinese person can’t drink this water.”
Downstream, villager Ma Huiming says it would be best if the Yangmei Group shut down the mine. Both the Yangmei Group and the local government denied requests for interviews. Ma says he’d like to return to farming, but between the toxic water and the coal dust in the air, it’s become too difficult to grow anything.
As a red truck packed with black rocks rumbles through the village, Ma says he’s left with only one choice: mining more coal.
by Rob Schmitz
But it tastes much worse.
“It’s got a strong taste, like ammonia, and it smells like sulfur,” says villager Ma Huiming. “It stains your skin orange.”
Ma says he and the hundreds of other people who live here drink this water and bathe in it. He takes me to the village well beside the river. We peer inside at the orange water. “It’s completely toxic,” Ma says, “But we’re too poor to afford to drink anything else. I worry about what it’ll do to my children, what kind of diseases they’ll get. People who can afford to leave for the city have moved.”
The orange water is caused by acid mine drainage – discharged water from a coal mine – it’s contaminated with sulfuric acid and a range of heavy metals. It’s a problem throughout Shanxi province, which provides a third of China’s coal. Ma says his employer, Yangmei Group, which runs a mine a few miles up the river, is responsible.
So I go there.
I arrive at lunch break – coal miners are outside a canteen eating noodles. When they see a foreigner with a microphone, a yelling match breaks out between workers who begin complaining about the water and workers who warn me to leave. Miner Zhang Quanding shows me his bowl of noodles. “Look at this water!” Zhang yells. “Pigs wouldn’t even drink water like this! I’ve had diarrhea for weeks!”
Zhang says workers have complained to management, but the complaint was ignored. Upon hearing this, the boss emerges from the canteen and yells at Zhang. Another miner shouts: “A true Chinese person wouldn’t talk to a foreign journalist.”
Zhang shoots back: “A true Chinese person can’t drink this water.”
Downstream, villager Ma Huiming says it would be best if the Yangmei Group shut down the mine. Both the Yangmei Group and the local government denied requests for interviews. Ma says he’d like to return to farming, but between the toxic water and the coal dust in the air, it’s become too difficult to grow anything.
As a red truck packed with black rocks rumbles through the village, Ma says he’s left with only one choice: mining more coal.
by Rob Schmitz
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