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BHP denied permission to appeal UK judgement over 2015 Brazil dam failure

BHP has been denied permission to appeal a ruling that found it liable for a 2015 dam collapse in the southeast of Brazil. The London lawsuit could be worth tens or hundreds of millions of pounds.

The London High Court ruled in November that BHP is legally responsible for collapse of Fundao Dam, located in Mariana (southeastern Brazil), which was owned by BHP's joint venture with Vale, Samarco.

BHP's request for a?permission of appeal this ruling? was denied by High Court. BHP has said it will directly apply to the Court of Appeal.

BHP's spokesperson stated in a press release that they would be appealing to the Court of Appeal. BHP will continue to vigorously defend all remaining phases of this action.

"Brazil's the best place to offer full and fair remediation to those affected."

After their initial win, the claimants' attorneys sought nearly 200 million pounds of legal fees. They had previously valued the case, which was one of the largest legal cases in English history, as up to 36 billion pound ($48.26billion).

In October, a trial will be held to decide the amount of damages that must be paid. A decision is likely to come in mid-2027.

BHP was sued by hundreds of thousands of Brazilians as well as dozens of local governments, and about 2,000 companies, over the collapse of Fundao Dam, Brazil's "worst" environmental disaster.

The collapse released a toxic sludge wave that left 19 dead, thousands homeless, and flooded forests. It also polluted the entire length of the Doce River.

Last year, Judge Finola O'Farrell found that BHP had been negligent in continuing to increase the height of the dam. This led to its eventual collapse. Reporting by Sam Tobin, editing by William James. $1 = 0.7459 lbs

(source: Reuters)