A mining town has 50 small-scale mines run by 22 cooperatives, each made up of eight to 10 workers, who earn no more than $120 a month; the lack of oxygen deep inside the mines makes for precarious and "exhausting" work conditions
San Cristobal, Venezuela: Henry Alviarez says he began small-scale coal mining in Venezuela's western Tachira state out of "necessity" due to the country's ongoing economic crisis which has deepened during the coronavirus pandemic.
He leaves home early in the morning on motorbike for the 45-minute journey to the Los Parra mine in Lobatera, near the border with Colombia.
The Andean town has 50 small-scale mines run by 22 cooperatives, each made up of eight to 10 workers who earn no more than $120 a month.
From Lobatera, the mined coal is moved via clandestine routes over the border to Colombia or the neighboring Merida state to be used primarily for generating electricity.