Environmentalists have protested the mining operation
Chile's president has said that Canadian firm Barrick Gold can resume operations at its massive gold mine in Chile as long as environmental rules are followed.
Construction of the Pascua Lama project, which Barrick Gold launched in
2009, was suspended in April when a Chilean court accepted a complaint filed by indigenous groups on environmental grounds.
Chile's environmental authorities on May 24 also slapped a $16.4 million fine on Nevada Mining Company SpA, a Barrick Gold subsidiary, for "serious" violations at the unfinished gold mine, reports AFP.
Barrick "will be able to continue (as long as it is) compliant with all the environmental legislation and procedures and standards that has been set by the Chilean government," Chilean President Sebastian Pinera said.
The president, speaking at a joint news conference with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, noted 23 environmental areas where Barrick "will have to improve their behaviour."
"The company has agreed to that," he said.
Chilean residents near the mine, located close to the border with Argentina, have long complained about possible environmental damage to waterways from the massive open pit mining project, one of the largest in the world.
Barrick Gold, the world's largest gold producer, planned to spend up to $8.5 bn on the mine, and hoped to start production there next year.
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