SAN JOAQUIN, Mexico (AP) 鈥 A drill echoes through narrow tunnels deep within the mountain where miner Hugo Flores bores into rock in search of one of Earth鈥檚 most toxic elements.
Buried in red stripes of minerals illuminated by his headlamp is mercury.
Here in the pine-covered mountains known as the Sierra Gorda 鈥 one of the most biodiverse stretches of Mexico 鈥 a 鈥渕ercury boom鈥 is underway.
Soaring international gold prices are driving up the price of mercury, a toxic metal key in , to all-time highs. While the demand triggers a mining rush in central Mexico, sustaining thousands of miners and their families, it also exposes them and the fragile environment to mercury poisoning. At the same time, this Mexican mercury is fueling , contaminating large areas and harming both people and the environment.
Global efforts to ban mercury mining have only made mercury from these centuries-old artisanal mines even more sought after.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a way of life here,鈥 Flores said.
In towns like San Joaquin in the north-central state of Queretaro, the price of mercury has skyrocketed more than tenfold over the past 15 years, jumping from $20 per kilogram (2.2 pounds) in 2011 to between $240 and $350.
鈥淔or the first time in their lives, mercury is worth something, and the miners are saying: 鈥業t鈥檚 worth poisoning myself if I鈥檓 going to earn something,鈥欌 said Fernando D铆az-Barriga, a medical researcher who has long studied mercury mines in central Mexico.
Mercury 鈥榗oyotes鈥
Miners follow veins of cinnabar 鈥 the ore holding mercury 鈥 like ants through narrow tunnels zig-zagging deep below the mountain. They carve into the rock and lug bags of stones strapped to their backs to the surface.
The rock is shoveled into wood-fired brick ovens where the mercury heats into a gas and separates from other minerals. The gas then cools into droplets of silver liquid that slowly drip down a pipe to be collected in small plastic Coca-Cola bottles, each of which sells for around $1,800. It takes a ton of rock to produce a kilo of mercury.
Mexico is the world鈥檚 second-largest mercury producer after China, yielding 200 tons a year, according to estimates by the United Nations.
Buyers come from around the world to scoop up mercury for cheap from artisanal miners.
鈥淭hey come and buy mercury for 500 pesos, and then sell it in Peru for 5,000,鈥 said Carlos Mart铆nez, a leader of one of San Joaquin鈥檚 mines. 鈥淭he coyotes, as we call them, they鈥檙e the ones that make money at the expense of others.鈥
Illegal gold mining
Mercury mining in towns dotting Mexico鈥檚 Sierra Gorda region dates back centuries. The metal was used in everything from thermometers to cosmetics and legally shipped to South America up until a few years ago, when many countries around the world banned its use. Today, the vast majority of Mexican mercury is trafficked to Colombia, Bolivia and Peru and distributed throughout the Amazon basin.
In the metal is used to extract gold from river soil in illegal gold mining operations increasingly controlled by criminal groups. The mining has tainted the rivers that bring life to the region.
In July, Peruvian shipment of four tons 鈥 worth about half a million dollars 鈥 of mercury hidden inside bags of gravel headed from Mexico to Bolivia.
A July report by the Environmental Investigation Agency, a nonprofit watchdog that investigates environmental crime, said the Mexican Jalisco New Generation Cartel has entered some mercury mining operations in Mexico. But miners, researchers and local officials say there鈥檚 no cartel involvement, and suggesting otherwise has criminalized vulnerable workers.
鈥淲hat we鈥檙e doing isn鈥檛 a crime,鈥 Mart铆nez, 44, said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just working.鈥
The demand for gold is expected to continue as investors seek its tangible safety at a time of global economic uncertainty triggered, in part, by the Trump administration鈥檚 tariffs, according to J.P. Morgan and other banks. Miners say they expect the same for mercury.
鈥淕lobally, the demand for mercury is only going to continue,鈥 Mart铆nez said. 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 going to go away.鈥
Mine or migrate
In San Joaquin, where government figures show that almost half of the 8,000 residents live in poverty, generations have faced a stark choice: migrate to the U.S. or work in a mercury mine.
Flores, the miner who wields the drill deep in the tunnels, said that was the choice his family faced when they migrated to the U.S. when he was a toddler.
When he was denied a green card at 24, he returned to Mexico to work in the mines, just as his grandfather did.
Now, with rising mercury prices, he鈥檚 watched a growing number of young men return from the U.S. to work in the mines too.
鈥淲e鈥檙e forgotten by the Mexican government,鈥 Flores, 39, said. 鈥淲ith the job opportunities out here 鈥 you can barely make ends meet.鈥
Around 3,000 people in the region live off the mines or their recycled material, said Izarelly Rosillo, a lawyer and researcher at the Autonomous University of Queretaro. She has spent so much time with miners over the past 12 years that she was diagnosed with mercury poisoning herself.
鈥淢ercury has set off a wave of development in the region,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hough that comes with collateral damages.鈥
The money from the mine has allowed Flores to send his five kids to school and buy them better clothes, better food and school supplies.
He鈥檚 even saved enough money to return to school if his mercury tunnels get shut down, though he said two of his teenagers have started working in the mines.
鈥淲ould I recommend it? Not for my kids, definitely not,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut you also want to make money.鈥
A 鈥榩oisoned鈥 region
D铆az-Barriga, the doctor specializing in toxic materials, said that while authorities have not comprehensively studied just how deep the mercury poisoning runs, initial tests done by scientists show dangerously high levels of the chemical in the environment and workers.
Miners eat stew and sip on tequila in the fumes billowing out from the mercury oven. They shovel the excess rock into a nearby riverbed, which flows into the region鈥檚 creeks when it rains. After work, they return home to their families with toxic dust on their clothes. In rainy months, miners often cook their own mercury in ovens installed in their homes.
鈥淲e鈥檝e seen a massive contamination in children, women, children, a ton of microorganisms.鈥 D铆az-Barriga said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 in the sediment, in the trees. Basically, this place is steeped in mercury.鈥
Researchers said they鈥檝e watched the health of miners and their families deteriorate as they show some of the worst symptoms of mercury intoxication, including tremors, neurological decline, vision and hearing loss, developmental delays in children and more. Rosillo, the lawyer whose blood test came back with levels of mercury 12 times the normal limit, said she suffers from brain inflammation, the loss of hearing in one ear, depression, tremors and more.
Miners suffering from tremors and slurred speech often insist they haven鈥檛 felt the negative impacts of long-term exposure. Instead, they attribute the decline they鈥檝e seen in fellow miners to , which numerous studies have linked to mercury exposure.
At 18, Samuel Ledesma, who began working in the mines at age 12, said his whole body started to shake and gradually fell ill. After blood tests, doctors told him he had mercury poisoning. He said that rounds of blood transfusions did little to help, and his body still trembles as he speaks.
鈥淚 ended up being sick for life,鈥 the 75-year-old said. Even so, he cast doubt on the impacts on the toxin鈥檚 effects on miners鈥 health.
And it may take years for the full force of the damages to be felt, D铆az-Barriga said.
Scientists, environmentalists and authorities at the United Nations also worry that the metal will wreak in one of the most diverse protected areas of Mexico: the Sierra Gorda Biosphere Reserve.
The mines are buried inside and adjacent to the reserve, which spans dense jungle and high altitude forest.
It鈥檚 considered a hot spot for endangered species, including the jaguar, military macaw, Mexican black bear and hundreds of other species that scientists say could be affected if the mining isn’t stopped and cleaned up by authorities.
The area around the mines “is the most contaminated place in Mexico,鈥 said D铆az Barriga. 鈥淭his region isn鈥檛 just polluted. It鈥檚 poisoned.鈥
鈥業t鈥檚 going to be the black market鈥
International efforts to stop mining and the international trade of mercury have fueled criticisms that it鈥檚 only driven mercury demand in Mexico and put miners in the crosshairs of organized crime.
In 2017, Mexico was among 152 countries that signed a U.N. convention banning mercury mining and making all exports of the mineral illegal. It gave smaller artisanal mines like those in Queretaro until 2032 to shut their doors, thrusting the mines into a sort of legal grey area.
As the world鈥檚 biggest mercury mines closed in recent years, miners in the Sierra Gorda say more buyers turned to Mexico as a source.
In 2021, Mexico and the U.N. created a fund to provide workers with resources and training for new industries, but years later miners say they haven鈥檛 received any money 鈥 and any alternative job won’t match what they earn from mining mercury.
In a written statement, Mexico鈥檚 environmental agency said it had conducted basic studies for a program designed to transition miners away from mercury and that it was actively working to 鈥渃ombat illegal trafficking.鈥 However, it declined to comment on accusations that it had failed to assist miners.
The UN Environment Programme recognized in a statement that a number of challenges including 鈥渟ecurity risks in some mining areas鈥 have 鈥渃reated delays and frustrations for affected communities.鈥 But it added that authorities were working to speed up implementation.
As they face economic instability, miners worry the mercury boom will further attract the attention of criminal groups.
Their concerns come as drug cartels have increasingly pushed into Queretaro, a region that had mainly been a pass-through for drugs headed to the border and largely avoided the violence consuming neighboring states.
鈥淚t鈥檚 easy for the Mexican government to say, ‘We鈥檙e gonna close down the mine and we鈥檙e going to wash our hands of it,鈥 said Flores. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when organized crime is going to come in, because then it鈥檚 going to be the black market.鈥
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