At least four people were killed and around 20 are missing after a deluge of mud and mining sludge burst through retaining walls at the Samarco mine Thursday and buried most of the nearby village of Bento Rodrigues.
The mine, a joint venture between Australia's BHP Billiton and Brazil's Vale, "can only resume operations once the investigation is finished and measures are taken to repair the damage," said a spokeswoman for the environment office yesterday in the southeastern state of Minas Gerais.
"Samarco is only authorized to carry out emergency actions aimed at minimizing the impact of the collapse and preventing new damages," the environment office said in a statement.
The two mining giants have seen their stock prices plunge since the disaster.
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Shares in BHP Billiton, the world's largest mining firm, fell five percent yesterday in London to a new seven-year low.
Shares in Vale racked up heavy losses Friday and were down one percent yesterday in Sao Paulo.
BHP Billiton's chief executive, Andrew Mackenzie, announced he would fly to Brazil "to understand first-hand the human, environmental and operational impacts of the incident."
Samarco, the 10th-largest exporter in Brazil, is 50-percent owned by both companies.
It has announced plans to hire external investigators to determine what caused the disaster.
The mine did not have sirens to warn residents in case of such a collapse.