BHP Faces COLOSSAL Lawsuit: Brazil DAM Disaster Victims Demand Justice
— Victims of Brazil’s worst environmental disaster are seeking justice in a UK court, nearly nine years after a catastrophic dam failure. The lawsuit targets BHP, demanding $47 billion in damages for the 2015 incident that devastated communities and claimed 19 lives. If successful, this case could lead to the largest environmental payout ever.
BHP owns half of Samarco, the company operating the mine where the tailings dam ruptured, releasing toxic waste into Brazil’s Doce River. The spill was massive enough to fill 13,000 Olympic-size swimming pools. Plaintiffs argue BHP should be held accountable for polluting and damaging local ecosystems and communities.
Attorney Alain Choo Choy insists BHP must pay for its role as a polluter, while BHP’s lawyer Shaheed Fatima argues that the company neither owned nor operated the dam directly. Fatima claims BHP had limited knowledge about the dam’s stability issues at that time.
The disaster severely polluted a river sacred to Indigenous Krenak people and killed tons of freshwater fish over 410 miles. Despite years passing since this tragedy, recovery efforts have yet to restore full ecological balance to affected areas.