Race to the bottom Consequences of massive coal mining for the environment and public health of Kemerovo Region 1 Race to the bottom: Consequences of massive coal mining for the environment and public health of Kemerovo Region Environmental group Ecodefense Kuzbass – Moscow – Kaliningrad 2021 Written by Yelena Solovyova, Vladimir Slivyak Edited by Maria Kaminskaya Translated into English by Maria Kaminskaya Layout and design by Nadezhda Telnova For additional information and inquiries: +7 (903) 299 75 84 e-mail:
[email protected] http://ecodefense.ru http://stopcoal.ru Table of contents Foreword 4 Public health 9 Air pollution 17 Water pollution 30 Disturbed lands 35 Coal mining waste 38 Sanitary protection zones and public resistance 43 Indigenous peoples 46 Afterword 49 1 Translator’s note: This is a report on the impact of extensive coal mining on the public health and environment of Kemerovo Region, an area in southwestern Siberia where some two thirds of Russia’s coal is mined and most of the coal produced is shipped to foreign markets. Kemerovo Region, with the city of Kemerovo as the seat of regional government, is also known as Kuzbass, which in Russian stands for Kuznetsk [Coal] Basin (Kuznetsky ugolny bassein) – one of the world’s largest coalfields. Kemerovo Region and Kuzbass are mostly interchangeable in Russian, and are used so throughout this report. In some official references or documents cited in this report both names are used. Given that coal mining and washing is the principal industry of Kuzbass, the term extractable resources, meant to refer to any mineral, ore, rock, or fossil fuel extracted for commercial purposes and used to some extent in official documents or other texts focusing on Kemerovo Region, will in the context of Kuzbass almost exclusively imply coal (some clarifying details on this interpretation are provided in Footnote 102 in the section titled “Mining Waste”).