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HomeTopicsEnvironment and WildlifeStandard Fruit Company in Costa Rica Settles Fish Kill Lawsuit

Standard Fruit Company in Costa Rica Settles Fish Kill Lawsuit

The Administrative Environmental Tribunal of the Ministry of Environment and Energy (MINAE) last week reached a settlement with the U.S. firm Standard Fruit Company regarding a massive fish kill in the Pacuare River, in the Caribbean province of Limón.

In a conciliation agreement signed last week between the transnational company and MINAE — approved by the tribunal — representatives of the company agreed to pay $115,000 to repopulate the Pacuare with various species of fish, La Nación reported.

The settlement also established that Standard Fruit must initiate the construction of a new airport, valued at $148,000, to prevent future ecological disasters related to the use of pesticides at the company’s banana plantations.

Literally countless fish died, allegedly as a result of an accident at the company’s airport in Batán de Limón, when a large amount of the pesticide Bravo 500 spilled from a storage tank into the river in January 2003.

Representatives of the Regional Environmental Council of Limón said the settlement is demonstrative of a timid government, wary of chasing the fruit company out of the country, La Nación reported.

Still, it may have set a precedent. “This is the first time anybody has had to pay a dime to try to figure out how to mitigate this,” said Emily Yozell, an attorney working for Justice for Nature, a non-governmental organization that has fought legal battles on behalf of community residents affected by fish kills in the region.

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