Abstract

Mining activities cause serious pollution problems that affect health and the environment. This paper focuses on the environmental and biological effects that mining activity had on the population living and working in the Riotinto-Nerva area in the last third of the nineteenth century and the early twentieth century, when this area accounted for approximately 10% of world copper production. To do so, we explore the social, technological, and scientific responses to environmental pollution caused by mining extraction in this area during industrialisation. Second, we analyse welfare indicators, such as the heights of conscripts and mortality rates, so as to examine the social effects of the mining activity. Third, municipal health and education expenditures are examined to study the intervention made by the local authorities to address the welfare problems caused by the mining work and environment. Finally, we examine whether the health policy had positive effects on the health of the population after the negative external effects of copper mining in this area had been mitigated. The findings show that the negative impacts of copper exploitation on the environment and welfare could only be diminished using health policies to combat this kind of urban penalty.

Highlights

  • Mining activities have exponentially risen over the last two centuries in order to provide the many primary resources required by industries throughout the world [1,2,3,4]

  • The increase in the population and global demand multiplied the needs for both mineral and energy resources, and mining responded to the process of industrialisation [5,6,7]

  • Since mining has given rise to severe environmental and social effects [8]. This paper examines these negative external effects of mining extraction in the area of Riotinto-Nerva during the industrialisation period and explores the role played by the public sector in mitigating these externalities

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Summary

Introduction

Mining activities have exponentially risen over the last two centuries in order to provide the many primary resources required by industries throughout the world [1,2,3,4]. The article contributes to the literature in at least three ways: first, it analyses the links between the mining activities, their repercussions on living standards measured through welfare indicators, and the socio-technological reactions to this problem. It assesses these responses and quantifies the public intervention. From 1876, intense protest movements arose within the mining basin’s local councils against heap roasting in order to protect the interests of farmers and workers, whose activities were affected by pollution and public health [32]. Responsibilities in the massacre were not elucidated [34]

Anti-Smokers and the Narrative on Pollution
A Harmonised Solution
The Role of Technology
The Scientific Controversy
The Biological Consequences of the Mining Activity
The Intervention of the Public Sector
Findings
Conclusions
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