Brazil miner Vale knew deadly dam had heightened risk of collapse
Previously unreported internal document put Brumadinho dam in ‘attention zone’, raising questions as to why miner did not take precautions
Belo Horizonte — The world’s largest iron ore miner, Vale, knew last year that the dam in Brazil that collapsed in January and killed at least 165 people had a heightened risk of rupturing, according to an internal document seen by Reuters on Monday. The report, dated October 3 2018, classified the dam at Brumadinho in the state of Minas Gerais as being two times more likely to fail than the maximum level of risk tolerated under internal guidelines. The previously unreported document is the first evidence that Vale itself was concerned about the safety of the dam. It raises questions as to why an independent audit around the same time guaranteed the dam’s stability and why the miner did not take precautions, such as moving a company canteen that was just downhill from the structure. Vale said that the report, called Geotechnical Risk Management Results, comprised the views of specialist engineers, who are obliged to work within strict procedures when they identify any risks. “There ...
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