Arlit
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arlit | |
The open pit Uranium Mine at Arlit | |
Location in Niger | |
Coordinates: | |
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Country | Niger |
Department | Agadez Department |
District | |
Population (2001) | |
- Total | 69,435 |
Arlit is an industrial town and capital of the Arlit Department of the Agadez Region of northern-central Niger, built between the Sahara desert and the eastern edge of the Aïr mountains. It is 200 km south by road from the border with Algeria. The town had a population of 69,435 at the 2001 census, and an estimated population of 80,000 in 2006.
Contents |
[edit] Uranium Industry
Founded in 1969 following the discovery of uranium, it has grown around the mining industry, developed by the French government. Two large uranium mines, at Arlit and nearby Akouta, are exploited by open top strip mining. One open pit mine was built in 1971 by the National Mining Company of Niger, SOMAIR.[1] The Second open pit mine, as well as a third underground mine, was built by the French Compagnie Minière d'Akouta (or COMINAK).[2] All the ore from both is now processed and transported by a French company Areva NC, a holding of the Areva group, itself a state owned operation of the French Commissariat à l'énergie atomique (CEA). The system of French nuclear power generation, as well as the French nuclear weapons program, is dependent on uranium mined at Arlit.[3] Areva alone employs 1600 foreign nationals on the site. [4]
In 2001 almost 80 000 tonnes of uranium were extracted from the Arlit and exported to France via truck to the seaport at Cotonou, Bénin. At its peak in the 1980s, 40 % of world uranium production came from Arlit, and uranium represented 90 % of Niger's exports (by value). A major modern road, known as the Uranium Highway, has been built to transport uranium south, but it has bypassed many towns along the way (In-Gall for example) and has radically changed Niger's transportation system.
[edit] Boom, Bust, and Recovery
In the late 1980s, Arlit suffered from a steep decline in world uranium prices, and the number of foreign employees in the town was cut to 700, a drop which has rebounded by the first decade of the 21st century. The value of Niger's uranium "boom" has never recovered its 1980s level, causing dislocation and suffering for the tens of thousands of Nigerans who flocked to the shanty towns surrounding Arlit.
Anger at the results of uranium bust, along with a belief that the best jobs were going to those from sothern Niger, contributed to the Tuareg Rebellion of the 1990s. As late as 2007, Tuareg nationalists have made a fairer division of profits and jobs for local people a primary demand. [5]
[edit] Environmental Impact
The impact on the local environment of the Arlit mining industry has been criticized by African and European Non Governmental Organisations, and Areva NC has especially been accused of disregard for health and environmental conditions around its operations.[6].
[edit] "Yellow Cake" Controversy
In the build-up to the war in Iraq there was controversy over allegations in 2003 that Saddam Hussein was seeking to purchase uranium from Arlit.
[edit] Expatriots and Immigrants
Arlit has developed a first-world infrastructure and airport to serve European workers and their families, and has become a transit point for undocumented immigrants attempting to travel to Algeria, and from there, France.
[edit] In Popular Culture
In 2005 the Benin filmaker, Idrissou Mora-Kpaï, produced and directed the film Arlit, deuxième Paris (Arlit, a Second Paris) about the large expatriot community in the town.
In 2007 Andersen Press published 'The Yellowcake Conspiracy', a novel by British children's author Stephen Davies. The novel is an espionage thriller set in and around the Arlit mine.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Somair Company Profile.
- ^ Georges Capus, Pascal Bourrelier and Moussa Souley. Uranium Mining in Niger; Status and Perspectives of a Top Five Producing Country. World Nuclear Association (2004). N.B.: The WNA is a nuclear industry funded group.
- ^ France and Nuclear Energy and French Involvement in Niger, both from Pederson, Nicholas R. The French Desire for Uranium and its Effects on French Foreign Policy in Africa. Arms Control, Disarmament, and International Security: Occasional Papers. PED:1. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (2000)
- ^ according to Le Canard Enchaîné (August 3, 2005)
- ^ [ l'Humanite, ] June, 2007.
- ^ Le dossier sur la mine d'Arlit de la CRIIRAD
[edit] External links
- (French) WebSite and photos of the town.
- (French) Rejets de la mine d’uranium d’Arlit, massif de l’Aïr, Niger (19°00' N – 7°38' E).
- (French) agadez.org page on Arlit.
- (French) Mines d'uranium au Niger : Un scandale nommé COGEMA: Le nucléaire, l'uranium et l' "indépendance énergétique" française (B. Belbéoch).
- (French) La production d'Uranium au service du développement durable, on the official site of the Areva mining company.