Brazilian prosecutors have filed a $43.4 billion lawsuit against BHP Billiton and Vale over the Samarco mine dam burst that killed 19 and wreaked environmental havoc.
The authorities "estimate the preliminary value for repairs to be 155 billion reals," the public prosecutor's office in the state of Minas Gerais said in a statement.
The announcement sent BHP's share price plummeting 9.36% to close at 18.79 Australian Dollar in Sydney, with a fall in iron ore prices adding to the selling pressure.
Brazilian-owned Vale and Anglo-Australian BHP, which co-owns the Samarco iron ore facility, had already agreed to a separate settlement of $6.2 billion with the Brazilian government in March.
Those funds were ordered to go toward compensating for social and environmental damages and to be paid over 15 years.
But the deal was criticised by prosecutors, who said that the amount of money was not calculated realistically.
The accident on November 5 last year near Mariana in Minas Gerais began when a tailings dam at Samarco's mine failed, unleashing the flood of polluted water and mud into the River Doce, one of the most important in Brazil.
A village was destroyed, drinking water supplies for hundreds of thousands of people were interrupted and damage reached as far as the river's mouth on the Atlantic coast, with wildlife, tourism businesses and fishing communities all suffering.
In February, police announced homicide charges against seven people, including six Samarco executives -- one of them the chief executive at the time of the accident.
Paulo Hartung, governor of Espirito Santo state, which also straddles the River Doce, has said the toxic flood marked "the biggest environmental disaster in the history of Brazil."
The civil suit filed yesterday called on Samarco's co-owners to "completely" compensate for the disaster.
Prosecutors said they calculated the $43 billion figure based on charges faced by BP after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.
BHP said in a statement to the market the lawsuit filed yesterday was for "social, environmental and economic compensation."
"BHP Billiton remains committed to helping Samarco to rebuild the community and restore the environment affected by the failure of the dam," BHP said, adding that it was still awaiting formal notice of the claim. Vale had no immediate response.
The authorities "estimate the preliminary value for repairs to be 155 billion reals," the public prosecutor's office in the state of Minas Gerais said in a statement.
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The announcement sent BHP's share price plummeting 9.36% to close at 18.79 Australian Dollar in Sydney, with a fall in iron ore prices adding to the selling pressure.
Brazilian-owned Vale and Anglo-Australian BHP, which co-owns the Samarco iron ore facility, had already agreed to a separate settlement of $6.2 billion with the Brazilian government in March.
Those funds were ordered to go toward compensating for social and environmental damages and to be paid over 15 years.
But the deal was criticised by prosecutors, who said that the amount of money was not calculated realistically.
The accident on November 5 last year near Mariana in Minas Gerais began when a tailings dam at Samarco's mine failed, unleashing the flood of polluted water and mud into the River Doce, one of the most important in Brazil.
A village was destroyed, drinking water supplies for hundreds of thousands of people were interrupted and damage reached as far as the river's mouth on the Atlantic coast, with wildlife, tourism businesses and fishing communities all suffering.
In February, police announced homicide charges against seven people, including six Samarco executives -- one of them the chief executive at the time of the accident.
Paulo Hartung, governor of Espirito Santo state, which also straddles the River Doce, has said the toxic flood marked "the biggest environmental disaster in the history of Brazil."
The civil suit filed yesterday called on Samarco's co-owners to "completely" compensate for the disaster.
Prosecutors said they calculated the $43 billion figure based on charges faced by BP after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.
BHP said in a statement to the market the lawsuit filed yesterday was for "social, environmental and economic compensation."
"BHP Billiton remains committed to helping Samarco to rebuild the community and restore the environment affected by the failure of the dam," BHP said, adding that it was still awaiting formal notice of the claim. Vale had no immediate response.