Metalclad
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Metalclad is an American landfill management firm.


Guadalcázar landfill

Metalclad bought a landfill site in
Mexico Mexico (Spanish: México), officially the United Mexican States, is a country in the southern portion of North America. It is bordered to the north by the United States; to the south and west by the Pacific Ocean; to the southeast by Guatema ...
's city of Guadalcázar from a Mexican company Coterin in 1993. Coterin had planned to develop a hazardous waste landfill on the site but were unable to secure the necessary permits from the local government. Metalclad were able to obtain land use permits from the Mexican federal government, but local governments did not respond to their application for a building permit, neither allowing nor denying the site.Compensation for Regulatory Expropriation Under NAFTA: Mexico and the Metalclad Case - International Environmental Law Committee Newsletter - Vol. 2, No. 3 - April 2000
/ref> The mayor of the city was opposed to the landfill because of the amount of toxic waste in it and the threat to the local water supply. In 1992, before Metalclad purchased the site, a review by Mexican environmental officials found that over twenty thousand tons of hazardous waste had been improperly dumped. The officials agreed to allow the dump to continue processing and to issue permits on the condition that Metalclad clean up the improperly dumped materials. In 1993, Metalclad purchased the landfill. Locals complained that they were getting sick, developing aggressive diseases, and that their water was polluted. The main water well was about 60 yards from the stream flowing through the location where Metalclad was dumping its material. A 1994 environmental study by commissioned by the new governor found that the dump was appropriately sited (located) and could continue operations. In 1995, the Mexican
Secretariat of the Environment and Natural Resources The Secretariat of Environment and Natural Resources (in Spanish: ''Secretaría del Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales, SEMARNAT'') is Mexico's environment ministry. Its head, the Secretary of the Environment and Natural Resources, is a member ...
authorized the operations of the landfill with the condition that Metalclad agree to clean up the improperly disposed hazardous materials. Local authorities then denied the building permit. A court case determined that the permit denial meant that Metalclad was required to cease operating the site. In 1997, Metalclad sued the Mexican Government for damages under Chapter 11 of NAFTA for $90 million and was awarded by an ICSID arbitration panel $16.7 million.ICID-Award in Metalclad Corp v The United Mexican States, CASE No. ARB(AF)/97/1, August 30, 2000
/ref> This award was later reduced by $1.1 million to $15.6 million, by review in the courts of British Columbia (the jurisdiction where the NAFTA hearing was held) due to a recalculation of the applicable interest period.


References

*''Trading Democracy'', Video, PBS (1994) Waste management companies of the United States Companies based in Orange County, California Companies based in Fullerton, California