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Rio Tinto’s water use dries sacred waterhole, Aboriginal group says

MELBOURNE, May 6 (Reuters) – A sacred waterhole used for thousands of years by Aboriginal people in Western Australia has run dry for the first time in living memory, with the Robe River ​Kuruma Traditional Owners blaming years of unsustainable water pumping by ‌Rio Tinto.

Robe River Kuruma, on whose land Rio Tinto operates an iron ore joint venture of the same name, were attending Rio Tinto’s annual general meeting in Perth on Wednesday.

Robe River Kuruma representative, Jason Masters, said that Rio Tinto’s over-extraction of water had ‌caused irreparable ​damage to his traditional lands in the West ⁠Pilbara region, and asked ⁠Rio Tinto to curtail its water use.

“This is a place where my grandmother was born, a sacred permanent water pool that held water through every drought our old people can remember, now dry for the ​first time in living memory,” he said.

“Even after heavy rainfall from cyclone Narelle, it remains dry today, he said, adding that old river gum ⁠trees fringing a nearby water system have ⁠died.

NEW PLANT TO HELP REDUCE WATER USE

Rio Tinto and ​the state government are building an A$1.1 million ($799,810) desalination plant due to start ​operating later this year and eventually supply eight gigalitres of water ‌annually, as part of plans to reduce water use.

“We are doing everything we can to try to get water back into the system, and that is well underway,” said Rio Tinto chairman Dominic Barton at the AGM.

“In ⁠terms of the irreversible impact and damage, we are very keen to discuss with you what we can do to help to deal with that.”

In March, ⁠Rio Tinto said that ‌the region had, over the past five years, frequently ⁠experienced annual rainfall and streamflow that were below the ​long-term ‌average.

“This has reduced important groundwater recharge at the Millstream ​and Bungaroo ⁠aquifers, which supply the West Pilbara Water Supply Scheme,” it said.

Rio Tinto in 2020 destroyed a rock shelter sacred to Australia’s Puutu Kunti Kurrama and Pinikura people, which caused a broad public uproar and ultimately led to the departure of the CEO, chair and other executives.

($1 = 1.3753 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Melanie BurtonEditing ​by Bernadette Baum)

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