Mining giant Vale failed to report problems at a massive tailings dam in Brazil that could have averted its collapse, killing hundreds, a government agency has said.
The January 25 dam breach in the mineral-rich state of Minas Gerais spewed millions of tons of mining waste across the countryside, leaving 270 people dead or missing, and forcing Vale to suspend some of its operations.
Internal Vale documents seen by investigators from the National Mineral Agency (ANM) show the mining company was aware of problems with a drainage system installed seven months before the disaster.
On January 10 -- two weeks before the dam ruptured -- two devices measuring liquid pressure had reached emergency level.
"The increase in pressure of the piezometers compromised the stability of the dam," ANM said in a statement on Tuesday.
But Vale failed to report any of the problems to the agency.
"If ANM had been correctly informed, it could have taken precautionary measures and forced the company (Vale) to take emergency actions that could have avoided the disaster," ANM said.
In a statement Vale said it would not comment on the "technical decisions taken by its geotechnical team at the time." The company said it would wait for the "expert, technical and scientific conclusions on the cause of the dam rupture." The ANM report comes amid growing pressure on the global mining giant.
Police said in September they have enough evidence to charge employees of Vale and its German auditor over false information used to certify the safety of the dam.
It is up to prosectors to decide whether to charge seven Vale workers, none of whom are senior managers, and six employees of TUV SUD.
The TUV SUD employees include a German-based business development director, engineers and consultants who certified the dam's stability in 2018.
That came after a judge ordered Vale to pay nearly USD 3 million to the families of three victims of the tragedy.
A separate court ruling in July ordered Vale to pay for all the damage caused by the disaster, without quantifying the amount of money.
Brazil has since banned the construction of new upstream dams, which are cheaper but less stable than other types of tailings dams, and ordered the decommissioning of existing ones.
ANM's damning accusations came on the fourth anniversary of the collapse of another tailings dam owned by a joint venture between Vale and the Anglo-Australian miner BHP.
The failure of the Fundao tailings dam unleashed a torrent of nearly 40 million cubic meters of highly toxic mine sludge over areas of the Mariana district, also in Minas Gerais.
The mud killed 19 people and flooded 39 towns, marking Brazil's worst environmental disaster.
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