The Devastating Costs of the Amazon Gold Rush
Spurred by rising global demand for the metal, miners are destroying invaluable rainforest in Peru's Amazon basin
- By Donovan Webster
- Photographs by Ron Haviv
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2012, Subscribe
It’s a few hours before dawn in the Peruvian rainforest, and five bare light bulbs hang from a wire above a 40-foot-deep pit. Gold miners, operating illegally, have worked in this chasm since 11 a.m. yesterday. Standing waist-deep in muddy water, they chew coca leaves to stave off exhaustion and hunger.
In the pit a minivan-size gasoline engine, set on a wooden cargo pallet, powers a pump, which siphons water from a nearby river. A man holding a flexible ribbed-plastic hose aims the water jet at the walls, tearing away chunks of earth and enlarging the pit every minute until it’s now about the size of six football fields laid side by side. The engine also drives an industrial vacuum pump. Another hose suctions the gold-fleck-laced soil torn loose by the water cannon.
At first light, workers hefting huge Stihl chain saws roar into action, cutting down trees that may be 1,200 years old. Red macaws and brilliant-feathered toucans take off, heading deeper into the rainforest. The chain saw crews also set fires, making way for more pits.
This gaping cavity is one of thousands being gouged today in the state of Madre de Dios at the base of the Andes—a region that is among the most biodiverse and, until recently, pristine environments in the world. All told, the Amazon River basin holds perhaps a quarter of the world’s terrestrial species; its trees are the engine of perhaps 15 percent of photosynthesis occurring on landmasses; and countless species, including plants and insects, have yet to be identified.
In Peru alone, while no one knows for certain the total acreage that has been ravaged, at least 64,000 acres—possibly much more—have been razed. The destruction is more absolute than that caused by ranching or logging, which accounts, at least for now, for vastly more rainforest loss. Not only are gold miners burning the forest, they are stripping away the surface of the earth, perhaps 50 feet down. At the same time, miners are contaminating rivers and streams, as mercury, used in separating gold, leaches into the watershed. Ultimately, the potent toxin, taken up by fish, enters the food chain.
Gold today commands a staggering $1,700 an ounce, more than six times the price of a decade ago. The surge is attributable to demand by individual and institutional investors seeking a hedge against losses and also the insatiable appetite for luxury goods made from the precious metal. “Who is going to stop a poor man from Cuzco or Juliaca or Puno who earns $30 a month from going to Madre de Dios and starting to dig?” asks Antonio Brack Egg, formerly Peru’s minister of the environment. “Because if he gets two grams a day”—Brack Egg pauses and shrugs. “That’s the theme here.”
The new Peruvian gold-mining operations are expanding. The most recent data show that the rate of deforestation has increased sixfold from 2003 to 2009. “It’s relatively easy to get a permit to explore for gold,” says the Peruvian biologist Enrique Ortiz, an authority on rainforest management. “But once you find a suitable site for mining gold, then you have to get the actual permits. These require engineering specs, statements of environmental protection programs, plans for protection of indigenous people and for environmental remediation.” Miners circumvent this, he adds, by claiming they’re in the permitting process. Because of this evasion, Ortiz says, “They have a claim to the land but not much responsibility to it. Most of the mines here—estimates are between 90 or 98 percent of them in Madre de Dios state—are illegal.”
The Peruvian government has taken initial steps to shut down mining, targeting more than 100 relatively accessible operations along the region’s riverbanks. “There are strong signals from the government that they are serious about this,” says Ortiz. But the task is enormous: There may be as many as 30,000 illegal gold miners in Madre de Dios.
The pit that we visited that day is not far from Puerto Maldonado (pop. 25,000), capital of Madre de Dios, a center of Peru’s gold mining because of its proximity to the rainforest. In a supreme irony, the city has also become a locus of Peru’s thriving ecotourism industry, with inviting hotels, restaurants and guesthouses in the forest, at the threshold of a paradise where howler monkeys leap in tall hardwood trees and clouds of metallic blue morpho butterflies float in the breeze.
On our first morning in Puerto Maldonado, photographer Ron Haviv, Ortiz and I board a small wooden boat, or barca, and head up the nearby Madre de Dios River. For a few miles upstream, wood-frame houses can be glimpsed along heavily forested bluffs. Birds dart through the trees. Mist burns away on the tranquil, muddy-brown river.
Suddenly, as we round a bend, the trees are gone. Barren stretches of rock and cobblestone line the shore. Jungle is visible only in the distance.
“We are coming to the mining,” says Ortiz.
Ahead of us, nosed against the stony banks, countless dredge barges are anchored. Each is fitted with a roof for shade, a large motor on deck and a huge suction pipe running from the stern into the water. Silt and stones extracted from the river bottom are sprayed into a sluice positioned on the bow and angled onto shore. The sluice is lined with heavy synthetic matting, similar to indoor-outdoor carpet. As silt (the source of gold) is trapped in the matting, stones hurtle down the incline, crashing in great mounds on the banks. Thousands of rocky hillocks litter the shoreline.
As we pass one barge—its blue-painted steel hull faded by the intense sun—the crew members wave. We beach our barca and clamber over the stone-strewn shore toward the barge, moored along the bank. A man who appears to be in his 30s tells us that he has mined along the river for several years. He and his family own the barge. The entire clan, originally from Puerto Maldonado, lives aboard much of the time, bunking in handmade beds on deck beneath mosquito nets and eating from a galley kitchen run by his mother. The din from the dredging engine is deafening, as is the thunder of rocks tumbling into the sluice.
“Do you get a lot of gold?” I ask.
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Related topics: Gold Mining Peru Rain Forests
Additional Sources
“Gold Mining in the Peruvian Amazon: Global Prices, Deforestation, and Mercury Imports,” Jennifer J. Swenson et al., PLoS ONE, April 19, 2011









Comments (15)
Although it does take a toll on the environment, it is helping these people's lives. Take the girl. She wouldn't have had a good life, hungry and in prostitution. The money she's making is helping her future and life so that she can be happier later. All the workers make double PER DAY what their entire family makes in a month. It certainly isn't good for the environment, but it's good for people and the economy. As a 1st world country, we take things like having food and clothing for granted, so it's easy for us to say they're hurting the environment. In truth, they're just doing their best to get by.
Posted by anonymous on October 30,2012 | 11:48 AM
I would love to know how we can help to stop this if there is any way we can. Its frightening and worrying. Please help us find the ways that we can make a difference before its too late.
Posted by David Beeman on July 3,2012 | 02:21 AM
What a shame...talk about completely obliterating the environment....I guess it won't end until there is not a single tree left standing....
Posted by eddie on May 9,2012 | 11:50 PM
There are definitely some threads of environmental and educational hope, the Nature Conservancy, the Smithsonian, however we humans are a marvel at leaving no stone unturned in feverishly obliterating other lifeforms on earth, while at the same time leaving no scientific stone unturned in feverishly trying to detect them elsewhere. Memo to ET: Hide.
Posted by Thomas Michael Andres on April 30,2012 | 11:48 PM
Panning for gold just to keep up with fiat money created out of thin air by central banks. It's commodity extraction attempting to keep up with money printing to delay economic collapse after almost 100 years of central banking.
Posted by LEM on March 3,2012 | 06:58 PM
Excellent article. I kept thinking about the early North American gold rushes and how much damage was done in California, Alaska, and the Klondike. We have so much gold mining going on now in Alaska and the Yukon, but at least we have regulations, safety rules, and some of the most egregious practices have been outlawed. Is it any surprise that people who have nothing will do whatever they can in their gold rush to make a life for themselves?
Posted by Peregrine on February 21,2012 | 05:27 AM
As devastating as it is; realistically, its the norm of our world. The poor must do what they can to survive, and they are so distanced from the rich that we can't see the cost of our actions. The only real way to halt this kind of behaviour is through fundamental changes to the perspective and values of the global society.
Posted by Liam Grimmett on February 12,2012 | 06:38 PM
Dear Sir.
Excellent report prepared by Donovan Webster. As a Peruvian, I see with concern that there is not a short-or medium term, any more than there is for general deforestation in the high jungle of Peru, as well as the degradation of our mountains that are a source of water for cities the coast. In some mining areas, populations oppose THE ACTIVITIES mining and ore prefer to remain underground because way too remove causes damage to the environment. The problem is extremely complex and has several players, not only in Peru, but also abroad (the buyers of precious metal). There is some levity in developed countries when demanding that poor countries get the care that they did not have when in full industrial development. It is hoped that governments take steps gradual, but serious and responsible in order to properly prosecute mining in our country.
Posted by Alonso Sarmiento on February 8,2012 | 01:40 AM
I've always been a bit repelled by the high-priced desserts and liqueurs laced with gold that I have seen featured in some "gourmet" magazines and websites. The gold is (please excuse the indelicate image) literally flushed down the toilet. Having read this article about the irreparable harm done to acquire some of the gold, the thought of wealthy people ostentatiously eating gold becomes even more sickening.
Posted by sierraseven on February 8,2012 | 07:32 AM
Fascinating article. However the author makes only the barest attempt at explaining the sudden gold rush. Hedging and luxury goods? Both have existed since the dawn of history. So why are the rainforests being ripped down only now? I believe it is due to inflation. Governments are printing money, desparately attempting to pay off enormous debts. To protect themselves, savers are buying gold, getting rid of their paper money. Evidence that this is so is buried in the article itself: Alipio notes that the prices of mercury and fuel have risen, so his operation exists at the margin of profitability. All three commodities have increased in cost simultaneously due to inflation - therefore the margin on gold is paper thin. So if we really want to save the rainforests, men with guns to keep out miners are not the answer. Ending legal tender laws and government monopoly money is.
Posted by Make Men Free on February 4,2012 | 06:54 PM
Disgustingly Inhumane and out of touch with the business lessons left for the next generation caught in between povertys opportunistic hand and international investors blind-eye push for prostituting middlemen everywhere with lies, greed and coercive ambitions. It is no wonder that in various religious sources, the concept of man paying for the faults of his past generation now makes clear sense. For all those that read this article, help do something about the demand for gold in your end of the world. Such disgrace, deceit and harm that can be regulated by officials in power or even prevented if one person could truly stand as leader to say, "ah yes although I could add millions to. Y pocket , let me think. Roared to the ramifications of this opportunistic moment." stand up!!
Posted by Vvillalobos on January 29,2012 | 11:23 AM
Increased gold mining due to skyrocketing price of gold. Gold increasing due to concerns about uncontrolled "printing" of money and profligate governments which can never, ever pay off their debts. Ultimately, this is the fault of the "economists" and politicians who brought us to this point with their economic policies.
Posted by Tom Amlie on January 27,2012 | 08:49 PM
It is too sad and ashame for the Amazonians and everybody. But, what is even worse, this catastrophic situation is not a surprise, it was announced 12 years ago by IIAP, a Peruvian research institution, and nobody took any action.
Posted by dennis del Castillo on January 26,2012 | 09:54 PM
Regarding The Devastating Costs of the Amazon Gold Rush, Smithsonian implies that the devastation is due, in part, to satisfying 'our' thirst for the metal. Since your own statistics show Peru as a relatively minor supplier of the world's gold, and since most of Peru's gold production is as co-product from non-ferrous metals production, I suggest that those involved are merely trying to enrich themselves by the only means available to them. With no one to stop them, or provide an alternative means of survival, we can hardly blame them.
Posted by Richard McClincy on January 22,2012 | 02:10 PM