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Alcoa pays $39 Million for illegally clearing Australian native forests

The Australian Environment Ministry announced on Wednesday that the U.S. aluminum company Alcoa would pay A$55,000,000 ($38.9,000,000) to remediate native forests it illegally removed in Western Australia?in order to mine bauxite.

The payment is for nearly 2,100 hectares (5.190 acres) in Northern Jarrah Forest south of Perth that will be cleared without government approval between 2019 and 2025.

The Ministry called this payment "unprecedented", as it was the largest ever made. It said that the money would be used to fund initiatives aimed at conservation, including programmes to protect endangered black cockatoos who nest in jarrah tree nests and improve the management of invasive species.

Alcoa claimed it complied with Australian laws, while accepting the payment to acknowledge historical clearing.

Since the 1960s, Alcoa has been mining bauxite in Western Australia, the raw material used to make aluminium. The company has also cleared approximately 28,000 hectares (69, 000 acres) of jarrah forests native to the state. Alcoa has a workforce of?around 5500 employees in Australia. Around 4,300 are located here.

Alcoa has faced increasing opposition to its land clearing activities and the environmental impact they have had on the only remaining jarrah forest in the world. A recent proposal to clear an additional 11,500 hectares attracted a record number of 59,000 public submissions to the state's environmental watchdog.

Environment ministry: The government will conduct a strategic analysis to determine the environmental impact of Alcoa’s current and future mining operations?throughout 2045.

Alcoa will be allowed to continue clearing "limited land" under the national interest exemption for a period of 18 months to ensure the supply of bauxite during the assessment, it added.

Alcoa pledged A$4.2million in additional?offsets' for activities that are covered by this exemption.

William Oplinger, CEO of Alcoa, said: "We are committed... to responsible operations. We welcome this important step towards a 'contemporary assessment system that will provide increased certainty for our operations and people in the future." $1 = 1.4152 Australian Dollars (Reporting and editing by Christopher Cushing in Sydney, Lincoln Feast, and Kevin Buckland).

(source: Reuters)