The 12-year long practice of Swedish companies supplying drilling equipment to the operation of the controversial Bou Craa mine in occupied Western Sahara has come to an end.
«We do not have any agreements for maintenance or supply for the Boucraa mine in Western Sahara and we have no plans to supply the mine in the future», VP Corporate Responsibility, Camilla Goldbeck-Löwe, wrote in an email to Western Sahara Resource Watch (WSRW) on 8 September 2020. WSRW has since received confirmation from several sources verifying this information.
Epiroc is a rather new Swedish company, established in 2018. The company was created as a result of a decision of the Swedish company Atlas Copco to split out its former business of mining equipment. At the time of the split, Atlas Copco had been selling and servicing equipment to the controversial mine in Western Sahara for several years. Its first sales to the operation took place in 2008, and the deal was revealed by WSRW only in 2013.
Though Atlas Copco and Epiroc did not comment on the matter for a long time after Epiroc’s establishment, it was a common understanding among the owners of both companies that the contract with OCP had been taken over by Epiroc, as was the case with other Atlas Copco contracts. A letter to Epiroc in November 2019 was not responded to, but when confronted by Business and Human Rights Resource Centre earlier this year, the company stated that it was «looking into this issue at present».
However, a tweet from Atlas Copco on 10 April 2019 led to confusion as to which company was actually holding the contractual obligation. Atlas Copco stated on social media that «the extraction of phosphate made by our customer follows the rules of international law». The tweet is still online.
Now, also Atlas Copco is clear that neither company plays a role in the mine. «Atlas Copco has no operations in Western Sahara. The customer for the Bou Craa mine and Atlas Copco has agreed that there will be no new orders for delivery of equipment, spare parts and service to Western Sahara», Atlas Copco’s Vice President Sustainability, Sofia Svingby, wrote WSRW in a mail on 18 September 2020. This was confirmed to Business and Human Rights Resource Centre in a letter 9 March 2020. «Atlas Copco has no operations in Western Sahara. The mining equipment business is now part of a separate publicly traded company, Epiroc AB. […] There is no service performed by Atlas Copco personnel in Western Sahara», the company wrote at the time.
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