Argentina approves Milei glacier mining reform amid protests
Argentina’s Congress approved on Thursday a government-backed bill pushed by the country’s right-wing President Javier Milei that opens sensitive high-altitude regions to mining, triggering warnings over water security and environmental risks.
Lawmakers in the lower house passed the reform 137–111, with three abstentions, clearing a final hurdle after Senate approval in February and setting the stage for the law to take effect once published in the official gazette.
The reform amends the 2010 Glacier Law by allowing provinces to define their own protection standards for glaciers and periglacial environments, a shift that critics say weakens safeguards for critical freshwater reserves.
Economy Minister Luis Caputo said in X the measure could generate $165 billion in exports by 2035 and create thousands of jobs, adding that “some provinces will be changed forever.” The central bank has separately estimated Argentina could triple mining exports by 2030 based on industry forecasts.
Growing backlash
Opposition lawmakers and environmental groups say the reform weakens national safeguards for critical freshwater reserves, with critics arguing that devolving authority to provinces risks inconsistent protections across fragile ecosystems.
Thousands of demonstrators gathered outside Congress on Wednesday, with sporadic clashes reported, as protesters carried banners reading “Water is more precious than gold!” and “A glacier destroyed cannot be restored!”
Opposition figures also accused authorities of limiting public input, saying just 0.3% of more than 100,000 applicants were allowed to speak against the proposal during hearings.
“Attempts by foreign organizations to interfere failed, and environmentalists determined to block the progress of the Argentine Republic were defeated once again,” Milei said, while also arguing critics would “rather see us starve than have anything touched.”
Water risk
Scientists and legal experts warn the changes could jeopardize water supplies for a large share of the population, with Enrique Viale, president of the Argentinean Association of Environmental Lawyers, saying the reform threatens resources relied on by 70% of Argentinians.
Since 2010, mining and industrial activity have been barred in glacier zones, which span nearly 17,000 ice bodies across 8,484 sq. km in the Andes and act as vital freshwater reserves.

Under the previous framework, a national scientific body determined protected areas, while the new law grants provinces authority to define which glaciers and periglacial zones can be developed, raising concerns about political and economic pressures shaping those decisions.
The University of Buenos Aires had earlier called for unified, science-based criteria, warning against fragmenting protections across jurisdictions.
Investment push
Provincial leaders in mining-heavy regions such as Mendoza, San Juan, Catamarca and Salta have backed the reform, arguing it clarifies rules and improves conditions for investment in critical minerals tied to the energy transition.
Milei’s government has rolled out tax, currency and legal incentives aimed at attracting global miners, including Glencore (LON: GLEN), BHP (ASX: BHP), Rio Tinto (ASX: RIO), Lundin Mining (TSX: LUN) and McEwen Mining (TSX, NYSE: MUX).
Rob McEwen, chairman of McEwen Mining, told MINING.COM that recent policy changes have transformed Argentina’s investment climate.
“Since President Milei was elected in December 2023, he has introduced policies and legislation that are designed to encourage investment into his country, to reduce inflation,” McEwen said, pointing to tax cuts and the removal of exchange controls. “Argentina has changed.”
2026 is shaping to be a key year for Latin America, with resources at the centre of a growing global power struggle, as governments and investors focus on who controls critical minerals and the supply chains behind them. If the region matters to you, don’t miss MINING.COM’s new series tracking the geopolitical forces reshaping it and why markets are increasingly driven by global alliances as much as local politics.
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