Berliner Boersenzeitung - Paraguay gold rush leaves tea producers bitter

EUR -
AED 4.012253
AFN 78.249721
ALL 98.476924
AMD 426.733873
ANG 1.95556
AOA 1000.606223
ARS 1174.549314
AUD 1.821792
AWG 1.968988
AZN 1.855331
BAM 1.95031
BBD 2.206509
BDT 132.777438
BGN 1.957698
BHD 0.411622
BIF 3195.71356
BMD 1.092365
BND 1.472296
BOB 7.567973
BRL 6.462652
BSD 1.092844
BTN 93.819609
BWP 15.371362
BYN 3.576349
BYR 21410.352342
BZD 2.195131
CAD 1.55443
CDF 3136.179527
CHF 0.938511
CLF 0.02821
CLP 1082.544774
CNY 7.983656
CNH 8.022273
COP 4797.9398
CRC 554.549058
CUC 1.092365
CUP 28.94767
CVE 110.929597
CZK 25.240731
DJF 194.134814
DKK 7.46643
DOP 68.927628
DZD 145.742706
EGP 56.1339
ERN 16.385474
ETB 141.6682
FJD 2.557116
FKP 0.84599
GBP 0.857239
GEL 3.003775
GGP 0.84599
GHS 16.879937
GIP 0.84599
GMD 78.062379
GNF 9479.730599
GTQ 8.42912
GYD 229.594028
HKD 8.486971
HNL 28.035061
HRK 7.535166
HTG 145.261722
HUF 404.569834
IDR 18094.172169
ILS 4.117178
IMP 0.84599
INR 93.407576
IQD 1431.351552
IRR 45882.167819
ISK 144.405962
JEP 0.84599
JMD 171.759319
JOD 0.774438
JPY 161.486503
KES 141.438758
KGS 94.783086
KHR 4367.919989
KMF 490.491651
KPW 983.128424
KRW 1594.254258
KWD 0.336235
KYD 0.895746
KZT 556.641763
LAK 23651.536355
LBP 98608.966353
LKR 322.714998
LRD 218.349105
LSL 20.855757
LTL 3.22547
LVL 0.660761
LYD 5.281541
MAD 10.416828
MDL 19.151126
MGA 5081.362219
MKD 61.259551
MMK 2293.770659
MNT 3832.684651
MOP 8.747269
MRU 43.602518
MUR 48.686268
MVR 16.887643
MWK 1893.474103
MXN 22.611462
MYR 4.846567
MZN 69.492256
NAD 20.855757
NGN 1670.729674
NIO 40.007385
NOK 11.965793
NPR 149.522177
NZD 1.970142
OMR 0.420558
PAB 1.092365
PEN 4.018263
PGK 4.476927
PHP 62.710531
PKR 306.238008
PLN 4.248782
PYG 8797.677897
QAR 3.9765
RON 4.963267
RSD 116.784841
RUB 92.306348
RWF 1540.498549
SAR 4.0965
SBD 9.284882
SCR 16.187573
SDG 654.294288
SEK 10.988727
SGD 1.470238
SHP 0.858427
SLE 24.851126
SLL 22906.347277
SOS 622.141772
SRD 39.88722
STD 22609.748273
SVC 9.557972
SYP 14202.758693
SZL 20.855757
THB 37.497113
TJS 11.900861
TMT 3.820449
TND 3.338821
TOP 2.626495
TRY 41.521795
TTD 7.352649
TWD 36.272853
TZS 2911.778408
UAH 45.297943
UGX 3994.328
USD 1.092365
UYU 46.137464
UZS 14113.908936
VES 77.955395
VND 28163.993912
VUV 133.396941
WST 3.058158
XAF 653.988868
XAG 0.036364
XAU 0.000366
XCD 2.949385
XDR 0.815721
XOF 653.988868
XPF 119.331742
YER 268.144655
ZAR 21.374086
ZMK 9832.596762
ZMW 30.477943
ZWL 351.741057
  • RBGPF

    1.0200

    69.02

    +1.48%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    8.23

    -0.24%

  • NGG

    -3.0300

    62.9

    -4.82%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    8.35

    -1.8%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    22.17

    -0.54%

  • SCS

    -0.3800

    10.2

    -3.73%

  • GSK

    -1.6900

    34.84

    -4.85%

  • BTI

    -0.4300

    39.43

    -1.09%

  • RELX

    -2.6300

    45.53

    -5.78%

  • AZN

    -2.6700

    65.79

    -4.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1100

    54.56

    -0.2%

  • JRI

    -0.7000

    11.26

    -6.22%

  • BCC

    -3.5500

    91.89

    -3.86%

  • BCE

    -0.6300

    22.08

    -2.85%

  • CMSD

    -0.3500

    22.48

    -1.56%

  • BP

    -1.2100

    27.17

    -4.45%

Paraguay gold rush leaves tea producers bitter
Paraguay gold rush leaves tea producers bitter / Photo: Daniel DUARTE - AFP

Paraguay gold rush leaves tea producers bitter

In a small town in Paraguay, a showdown is brewing between traditional producers of yerba mate, a bitter herbal tea popular across South America, and miners of a shinier treasure: gold.

Text size:

A rush for the precious metal is pitting mate growers and Indigenous groups against the expanding operations of small-scale miners who, until recently, were their neighbors, not nemeses.

"They (the miners) have destroyed everything... the canals, springs, swamps," said Vidal Britez, president of the Yerba Mate Producers' Association of the town of Paso Yobai, about 210 kilometers (130 miles) east of Paraguay's capital Asuncion.

"You can see the pollution from the dead fish. The water has changed color," the 56-year-old told AFP.

Yerba mate, a green infusion sipped from a gourd with a metal straw, is deeply rooted in Paraguay, where the Guarani people have cultivated the tree that produces the leaves for centuries, including in Paso Yobai.

But when an Ecuadoran miner discovered gold nuggets in a stream there in the 1990s, the town's fortunes changed. One in six of its 30,000 inhabitants now lives off mining and related activities, with angry mate growers saying they are being squeezed out.

They also complain of environmental damage from the mercury used to extract gold, and the arsenic released in the process.

The place "is the cradle of yerba mate," Britez said indignantly, showing AFP mate leaves covered in mining dust that he says are being spurned by buyers.

Tensions boiled over last month, with armed mate farmers and miners working for the Paraguayan subsidiary of a Canadian company nearly coming to blows.

No injuries were reported in the standoff.

But since then, small groups of mate farmers have been camping out around Paso Yobai to prevent miners digging more quarries or pits.

- Path to a better life -

In just a few years, Paso Yobai has been transformed from a quiet, bucolic settlement into a frenetic anthill of activity with lines of trucks hauling sand to pools where the gold is processed.

The farmers claim there are more than 300 excavations around the town -- most of them illegal.

Each dig can yield about a kilogram (2.2 pounds) of gold in a month or two, and for some, the town's long-hidden treasure has proved to be a boon.

Paso Yobai's 2,000-odd small-scale miners earn about $20 per day -- roughly equal to the country's minimum monthly wage.

"Many families managed to improve their homes, managed to get their children to study at universities," miner Ruben Villalba told AFP.

The mate farmers, by contrast, barely break even most of the time.

- 'No complaint' -

In 2024, Paraguay exported 600 kg of gold extracted mainly in Paso Yobai, generating $260,000 in royalties for the government, according to Deputy Minister of Mines and Energy Mauricio Bejarano.

In an interview with AFP, he boasted that "profitability is guaranteed" as Paraguay seeks to expand its fledgling gold-mining sector.

As for environmental concerns, he said that "as far as I know, there has been no complaint."

The UN Environment Programme has observed in a report that Paraguay has not conducted a national inventory of mercury pollution.

Two Paraguayan universities are researching the issue but have yet to present their findings.

Ruben Irala Galeano, an agricultural engineer and researcher on the project, told AFP initial findings have pointed to "alarming" mercury levels and to "an ecological crime being committed in Paso Yobai."

His concerns are shared by Nery Cardozo Benitez -- a Mbya Guarani leader -- who told AFP the community could see the effects of the mining for themselves.

"The chemicals they use are very potent. They evaporate into the air and contaminate our animals," the chief said.

Mariano Benitez, a fellow Indigenous leader from a nearby settlement, said the contamination was making it difficult to survive.

"The fish are dying. We don't have drinking water," he said.

(O.Joost--BBZ)