Tag Archives: Mining

Harper stands firm on rejecting proposed Prosperity mine project

Share

From the Globe & Mail – Feb 21, 2011

by Ian Bailey

Prime Minister Stephen Harper says his government would reject high-level lobbying to revive the Prosperity Mine project.

Christy Clark, seeking the leadership of the B.C. Liberals, had promised
to press Ottawa to change its decision on the $800-million mine if she
became premier, but Mr. Harper told reporters on Monday that he was not
interested in “political bargaining” over the fate of the project.

Mr. Harper was not referring specifically to Ms. Clark’s pledge, but
rather to a question about a possible bid by B.C.’s next government to
save the project. A new premier will be elected Feb. 26 by B.C.
Liberals.

“The government has rendered a decision. That decision is final. That’s a
legal decision,” Mr. Harper said during a news conference.

“We acted on a comprehensive federal environmental assessment that was
absolutely categorical and we have invited the proponent to redesign the
project if the proponent is interested in proceeding in a way that
would respect the myriad and serious environmental concerns that were
raised by that assessment,” Mr. Harper said.

“These kinds of decisions are made on the basis of facts – not just
economic facts, but also environmental facts in this case, and
proponents will have to address that. This is not a matter of political
bargaining.”

Mr. Harper’s comments came as Taseko Mines Limited, leading the project,
said Monday it had submitted a new proposal for the copper and gold
mine.

The company said in a statement it can now save Fish Lake, near the
community of Williams Lake, which was a point of concern in their
previous submission. Such an effort would add $300-million to the
planned $800-million project.

The company said it has been assured by the federal government that it
wants to see resource projects developed, and is only opposed to the way
Prosperity was originally proposed.

A provincial assessment of Prosperity supported the original project but
acknowledged the controversial planned destruction of Fish Lake to
store toxic waste from the mine.

B.C. was looking forward to the predicted $5-billion economic injection
over the 20-year life of the mine and $600-million of revenue for
various governments, in a region of the province devastated by the
mountain pine beetle. The destruction of Fish Lake was vehemently
opposed by local natives, who hold it to be a sacred site.

However, the project was eventually rejected by the federal government after a negative environmental assessment.

A spokesman for Ms. Clark said Monday that the former deputy premier was
only ever interested in supporting the company’s efforts to make the
process work.

Read full article

Share

Evidence Shows Raven Coal Mine Only the First Among Many Planned

Share

From the Times-Colonist – Feb 21, 2011

By Calvin Sandborn

The letter from the CEO of the Raven coal project raises the central
issue about the proposed Raven mine: Will this be the first of a number
of mines in the vast coal reserve that stretches from Fanny Bay to near
Campbell River?

Skyrocketing world coal prices are accelerating B.C. coal development. Could the mid-Island turn into a miniAppalachia?

The letter states “Compliance Coal Corporation has no plans to develop other properties on Vancouver Island at this time.”

The
Compliance website states: “Compliance’s projects in the Comox Coal
Basin are the Raven Underground Coal Project and the Bear Coal Project .
the Comox Joint Venture [60 per cent owned by Compliance] is focused on
developing the Raven Coal Deposit and the nearby Bear Coal Deposit.”

Has Compliance dropped its plans to develop the Bear project? If so, perhaps its website should be updated.

In
addition, perhaps the Compliance slide show presented at its 2009
annual general meeting can be explained. It sets a target of $100
million in revenue by the end of 2012, and mentions properties such as
Wolf Mountain and Anderson Lake, along with rights to coalbed methane.

Has Compliance’s ambitious strategy for next year been abandoned?

If
not, the Raven environmental assessment needs to be expanded to
consider the cumulative environmental effects that additional coal mines
could have. Provincial and federal environment ministers should appoint
an independent panel of experts to hold full public hearings on this
issue.

No environmental issue is more important to the people of Vancouver Island.

Calvin Sandborn

Legal director Environmental Law Clinic University of Victoria

Read original letter
Share

Northwest Transmission Corridor: Alaska Power and the Bleeding of the Northwest

Share

From TheTyee.ca – Feb 18, 2011

by Christopher Pollon

There’s a sucking sound coming from B.C.’s northwest
corner, barely audible now, but sure to crescendo as the electrical grid
is extended beyond the city of Terrace into a vast copper and gold rich
hinterland after 2013.

The source is the Alaska-B.C. intertie — a scheme planned and feverishly promoted yesterday
in Juneau, Alaska — that would connect the Alaska Panhandle to the
North American power grid through northern British Columbia. (See a map here and the sidebar to this story).

Positioned by Canadian and U.S. federal
governments as a green infrastructure project to combat climate change,
this Alaska-driven plan is paving the way for a new resource haul road
through the Iskut River valley to Alaska tidewater.

Activists and at least four northern B.C.
mayors have warned that Bradfield Road will one day provide a closer and
more economical route to funnel B.C. minerals and timber through U.S.
ports, shifting the axis of trade away from Stewart, Kitimat and Prince Rupert.

Nathan Cullen heard all about the Bradfield Road during his first year as the federal MP for Skeena-Bulkley Valley
in 2004. “Some Alaskans approached me and said, ‘Here’s the project,
and we’ll put this road in for free, and we’ll ship all your goods as a
nice courtesy,'” he says. “If anybody offers you anything for free,
especially from Alaska, you should be worried. The idea of cutting off
Canadian ports from being involved in the resource sector is not on, and
we’ll resist it.”

But the Northwest Transmission Line (NTL), (see map here)
when fully built out, will extend the North American grid to within 35
miles of the Alaska-B.C. border. Once the grid connection to Alaska is
established, says Chris Zimmer, a Juneau Alaska-based campaign director
for Rivers Without Borders, a resource haul road to Alaska is next.

“The grid intertie is going to need a
right-of-way and access roads, so the next step is formalizing that road
into a resource haul road,” says Zimmer. “The Bradfield Road is an
Alaskan road designed to drain future resources out of B.C. at a frantic
and unsustainable rate.”

Alaska-BC grid connection moving forward

The B.C. right-of-way for the future Alaska
grid connection is already being explored. In Nov. 2010, the BC
provincial government issued an “investigative use permit”
to North Coast Power Corporation to explore about 25,000 hectares of
Crown land — a long narrow strip of land extending from the future B.C.
grid terminus to the Alaska border (see map. The expressed purpose of the permit was “investigating the feasibility of a utility line intertie between B.C. and Alaska.”

The goal of this intertie, says the Alaska Energy Authority
is to “provide the energy needed for economic development in southeast
Alaska resulting in jobs for Alaskans and providing reliable, less
costly alternatives to diesel generated electricity for Alaskan
communities.”

Read full article

Share

Video of 2010 Fraser River Gravel Mining as 2011 Program Cancelled!

Share

In February 2010, filmmaker Damien Gillis captured the gravel mining operations on the Fraser River with a team of expert biologists and local conservationists. Now, at the 11th hour, this year’s planned mining projects have been unexpectedly cancelled. The rationale given by DFO is logistical complications and low market prices for gravel, only confirming critics’ position that this program is not about reducing flood risks – and all about money. Watch this video to see what these huge mining operations really look like – and why the ecologically damaging program should be scrapped altogether. Be sure to check out this new report from common sense contributor Otto Langer on the subject as well.

Share

2010 Fraser River Gravel Mining

Share

In February 2010, filmmaker Damien Gillis captured the gravel mining operations on the Fraser River with a team of expert biologists and local conservationists. Now, at the 11th hour, this year’s planned mining projects have been unexpectedly cancelled. The rationale given by DFO is logistical complications and low market prices for gravel, only confirming critics’ position that this program is not about reducing flood risks – and all about money. Watch this video to see what these huge mining operations really look like – and why the ecologically damaging program should be scrapped altogether. Be sure to check out this new report from common sense contributor Otto Langer on the subject as well.

Share

Fraser River Gravel Mining: Misdirected Government Priorities & Ongoing Environmental Degradation

Share

[Editor’s Note: This time last year, we brought you in-depth coverage on the ongoing Fraser River gravel mining program and its resulting ecological impacts on salmon and sturgeon spawning grounds – featuring a report by retired DFO senior biologist and manager Otto Langer. One year later, on the eve of another season of mining operations, comes the surprise revelation from DFO that this year’s planned mining of 184,000 cubic metres of gravel from Tranmer Bar, near Agassiz, has been cancelled! The rationale cited was logistical delays and low market
prices for gravel – only confirming critics’ position that this program isn’t safety-driven (for flood risk management, as the public has been told), but rather market-driven.
Hopefully this year’s hiatus will provide time for
the public to convince the Province and DFO to permanently scrap
this unnecessary, environmentally destructive program.
]

—————————————————————————

We are in the midst of the Cohen Inquiry on the collapse of the 2009 sockeye runs into the Fraser River. Despite that, in the past two years the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) continued to approve some of the largest mining programs on Lower Fraser River gravel bars that are essential habitat for salmon, sturgeon and eulachon populations. This is despite the fact white sturgeon and the eulachon are endangered species in the Fraser River and that the Federal government has initiated a 25 million dollar inquiry to determine why its sockeye runs have declined prior to 2010.

DFO and the BC Government signed a five year agreement to mine excessively large quantities of gravel from essential gravel bar habitats in the Chilliwack to Wahleach Creek section of the Fraser beginning in 2004. Considering that the gravel removal agreement ended in 2008, why would gravel mining be an issue in 2011? The agreement ended in 2008 but was extended without any public consultation into 2009, 2010, and now 2011. This lack of public consultation should not be a surprise to anyone in that the original agreement was developed and signed without any attempt to obtain public input.

One can only be critical of government’s way of doing business at the expense of a public resource under the alleged claim of “flood risk reduction”. The Province’s and DFO’s own engineering consultants have concluded in their studies that the large-scale continued long term mining of many essential gravel bar habitat areas will cause long-term hydrological and ecological damage to the river and provide negligible public safety benefits.

A recent inspection of the mining of Gill, Little Big Bar and Hamilton Bars in December 2010 by the Fraser River Gravel Stewardship Committee (FRGSC) showed that the gravel bars had recovered little after the spring freshet of 2010 and two of the bars were mined so as to create ponds that trapped fish and exposed them to dehydration and predation. DFO was specifically warned that the mining practices seen in 2010 would cause that impact, but, again, this public input was not acted on.

Also, the inspection showed that the largest single mining project to date on Spring Bar in 2008 (i.e. 400,000 cubic metres), had recovered little after three freshets and the mining at that site has resulted in a small lake isolated from Fraser River flows. DFO had previously claimed that such sites would rehabilitate in two to three years and therefore habitat compensation works were not required.  In addition, temporary bridge structures were left in the river and have posed a great risk to navigation, almost killing two fishermen in one boating mishap.

In the fall of 2010 the FRGSC learned that Emergency Measures BC (EMBC), the promoter of gravel bar mining for alleged flood control purposes, was planning to again mine Powerline and Tranmer Bars in 2011. Despite the costly consultant surveys and impact reviews, the FRGSC was advised that gravel sales were slow and of the two applications submitted, EMBC would probably only proceed on one. This thought process threw doubt on the necessity of gravel mining for flood control purposes. Was this a real flood risk reduction project or a commercial gravel mining venture rationalized as a public safety project? This approach also shows utter contempt for the costs involved and the wild goose chases the public and the reviewing agencies would be led on. Why do costly studies at two sites when one would only be selected at the eleventh hour based on the wrong rationale?

By late December it was obvious that EMBC would only proceed on the mining of Tranmer Bar. Tranmer Bar has been mined repeatedly in the past few years and in 2010 it was dropped from mining plans due to various concerns related to the impacts of mining that site.

To date, the mining of certain bars was allowed by Ministry of the Environment (MOE) and DFO, even though inadequate data existed on the value of those high bar spawning sites to the endangered Fraser River white sturgeon. This despite the fact a DFO habitat engineer previously determined that this bar habitat was in short supply and the value of them has high and the mining activity on them would cause a significant impact.

Sturgeon studies were begun in 2010 but were poorly funded by the Province and initiated in a near-historic low-flow year and were bound to supply very inconclusive results. Despite this, MOE and DFO did not object to allowing more mining in probable sturgeon spawning habitats and the Canadian Wildlife Service of Environment Canada seemed not to care about the use of these habitats by thousands of birds – including swans, blue herons, eagles and many species of ducks.

Studies by the FRGSC in December 2010 showed that the habitat on Tranmer Bar was characterized by many spring-fed streams/backwaters that supported large populations of rearing fish including mountain whitefish and juvenile sockeye salmon and was a resting site for swans. Despite the concerns over the past many years, DFO again determined that public consultation was not necessary in their Fisheries Act and Canadian Environmental Assessment Act reviews. This determination was despite the fact that the public have continuously voiced objections to what was proposed. The proponent (EMBC) has also refused to meet with the public to discuss the program.

Despite this lack of consultation, the DFO CEAA screening report notes that DFO received 18 submissions on the project – most opposed. It was obvious that MOE and DFO largely dismissed public concerns and expedited the approvals in mid-January so the mining could be initiated in order to be done by March 15, 2010. The Province and DFO have an agreement in place to allow an early seasonal review of these projects but in 2011, as in all previous years, they were again some three months behind schedule on their own review and issuing of permits.

The project as approved by DFO allows for the disturbance of 275,000 m2 (68 acres) of Tranmer gravel bar habitat and the mining of up to 184,000 m3 of gravel and the processing of gravel on site for market-ready sales. Considering the very late review and approval of works by the regulatory agencies, by early February the construction of the roads and bridges to allow the mining had yet to begin. The reason given to the public is that EMBC did not have equipment lined up to do the work and the price of gravel is not economic to mine. This is despite the fact that the government in the past has waived the need to collect royalties on such mined gravel.

The above development is rather amazing but not surprising. Several times in the past the BC Government has led the public to fear the next flood and has rationalized the mining of the river’s gravel bars to address the upcoming spring’s flood threats. DFO staff have even convinced their Minister that the mining had to occur or flooding could take place, causing the loss of life and property. DFO then would document in internal correspondence how they were not convinced of the value of the mining as related to flood control benefits and that alternatives such as better dykes could be more effective.

Despite DFO staff reservations, their Vancouver Director General advised them not to discuss alternatives and to not question any EMBC rationale for mining gravel bar habitats. For instance, in 2007 great urgency was put on mining Spring Bar to address  floods that could occur that spring due to high snow pack. Despite the Provincial and DFO-created panic, the mining did not take place. When it did take place a year later, DFO consultants and the BC dyke safety engineer noted that the mining would not address any reduction in flood risks and the latter expert said the mining was largely promoted by DFO to allow a local aboriginal band to profit from the sales of gravel so DFO could improve relationships with that band.

To some degree it is obvious that the mining program is being done under a near-fraudulent rationale and the public have been geared up to support the program due to a fear campaign run by certain politicians. The EMBC managers even have admitted that when they took the lead in promoting gravel mining, they said they could best sell it as a flood control program. The MLA for Chilliwack – who has always promoted gravel mining – happened to be the Minister in charge of EMBC at the time and ran his own media campaign to promote gravel mining in the river.

Once again the politics of gravel removal seem not to need a solid and valid scientific rationale. Those who are most entrusted to protect the river and its fish and wildlife habitats have been ordered to not question the need or value of the mining and to learn to deal with the impacts caused by that program. Furthermore, they have not required habitat compensation works so as to assure an ongoing no net loss of habitat as required by the Fisheries Act habitat policy.

One can argue that some gravel removal will always be necessary. Certain bottlenecks to flow will occur. However, such a program must be embedded into an overall long-term environmental management plan for the gravel reach of the Fraser River, similar to the downstream Fraser Estuary Management Plan which was put into place some 30 years ago to address development and environmental protection concerns in that part of the river. Despite the EMBC commitment to annual gravel mining and the ill-advised MOE and DFO support for that program, absolutely nothing has been done by the environmental agencies to require a long-term environmental management plan to protect river values, examine the cumulative long-term impacts of annual gravel mining, develop a convincing flood risk plan, and allow full and open public consultation on this entire issue. Considering that it is now 2011, the absence of this long-overdue basic work and planning is an absolute condemnation of the conservation mandates of the BC Government, DFO and Environment Canada.

One can only draw the conclusion that in the Lower Fraser we can only afford to allow gravel mining for the alleged purposes of flood control when the economy needs and is ready to buy the gravel at an acceptable price.  Fortunately, we do not run other public safety programs in the same manner. Imagine if a slide was to occur in the Fraser Valley and the removal of the debris was not addressed until partnerships were in place to mine and sell it!

Our Federal government is committed to a proactive strategy to protect our living legacies for the benefit of all Canadians and, above all, to take a precautionary approach in doing this. Does the use of the Fisheries Act, its supporting no not loss policy, the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, cumulative impacts and proactive management mean nothing to government over the past decade, especially after years of good progress to better protect the environment in the decades prior to the year 2000? Why should we now step backwards?

Note: On February 16, 2011, I received notice from DFO that EMBC has abandoned the Tranmer Bar gravel mining project for 2011. As previously advised, the cancellation is believed to be due to the very late scheduling of the project by the government agencies, the inability of the Province to line up the equipment to do the job at this late date, and the present low values in the commercial value of the gravel.

Otto E. Langer BSc(Zool) MSc

Share

Meeting Allows Raven Coal Mine Opponents to Give Views

Share

From the Times-Colonist – Feb 9, 2011

by Judith Lavoie

Opponents to new coal mines on central Vancouver Island will hold
their own version of a public hearing at the University of Victoria
tonight.

“This is the first major meeting in Victoria on this issue,” said Calvin Sandborn, Environmental Law Centre legal director.

The
centre, on behalf of CoalWatch Comox Valley, has asked the federal and
provincial governments for a joint independent expert review panel and
public hearings into the proposed Raven Underground Coal Project near
Buckley Bay.

But instead, government has decided to do much of the
decision-making behind closed doors, said John Snyder, CoalWatch
president.

“This meeting will not be as good a process as a full
public hearing by an independent panel of experts, but it may be the
best remaining chance for Islanders to express their concerns,” he said.

The
Raven application is likely the thin end of a wedge as the rich coal
seam, that stretches from Fanny Bay to near Campbell River, is already
sparking other applications, including plans for two open-pit mines,
Sandborn said.

“It could be the first step to turning the
mid-Island into a mini-Appalachia, and is that really what the people of
Vancouver Island want?” he asked.

The shellfish industry around Fanny Bay and groundwater could also be put at risk, Snyder said.

The meeting is at 7 p.m. in Room 159 of the Murray Fraser Building at UVic.

Read original article

Share

CBC Video: Uranium spill sends ship back to B.C.

Share

From CBC – Jan 17, 2011

Regulators have boarded a ship carrying uranium in B.C. waters,
figuring out how to handle a spill of radioactive material in the ship’s
hold.

The ship left Vancouver just before Christmas, bound for China. It is
carrying powdered uranium concentrate from the Saskatchewan mining
company Cameco.

But bad weather during the Pacific crossing caused two drums of
uranium to spill into the cargo hold, prompting the crew to turn the
ship back to British Columbia.

The uranium is safely contained within the ship’s hold, Cameco spokesman Rob Gereghty said Monday.

“We’re going through an assessment process right now but the hatch
was sealed once the uranium was found to be on the floor,” Gereghty
said. “We requested the ship to come back so that we could assess,
secure and remediate the situation.”

Watch video report and read full article here
Share

Report from the Edge of BC’s Copper Rush

Share

From TheTyee.ca – Jan 13, 2011

By Christopher Pollon

The province’s northwest is slated for a mining boom. A visitor to
those remote parts finds ambition and dread, natural wonders and
billions at stake. Part one of two.

Way up above the headwaters of the Iskut River, in an
alpine meadow bursting with August wildflowers, eight demon-horned rams
appear suddenly.

The two parties — two humans and eight Stone’s sheep — all freeze on the spot, eyes locked. Paul Colangelo, a wildlife photographer hoping for just this luck, drops to the ground, crawling over a ridge and out of sight.

The Stone’s sheep he pursues are the
charismatic mega-fauna of Todagin Mountain in the upper Stikine River
watershed (see map below). Elite hunters
from all over the globe come here every year, about 1,700 kilometres
north of Vancouver, paying upwards of $30,000 for the opportunity to
take down a single ram, a cull considered sustainable in these parts
because the sheep are more abundant here than anywhere else.

They are equally numerous directly to the
northeast, which also happens to be the site of Imperial Metal
Corporation’s ongoing summer drill program at its proposed Red Chris
open pit copper/gold mine. The company has five drilling teams working
all out, and word in the valley is they are finding more gold the deeper
they drill; but as with everything I hear about mining ventures this
summer spent exploring B.C.’s northwest, it’s hard to separate fact from
cash-lubricated fiction.

While Colangelo chases sheep, I climb to
the summit to scan the valley below (see video, below): three
cigar-shaped, impossibly-blue lakes connected by the braided, meandering
Iskut seem to encompass the entire valley bottom. Skirting their edge
is the single-track Stewart Cassiar Highway; out of sight to the east,
not far from where I stand, are the collective headwaters of the Nass,
Stikine and Skeena rivers.

I’m returning to this area after a year’s
absence, during which time the optimism has returned to the northwest
mining and exploration community, thanks to a massive provincial and
federal infrastructure subsidy that will see
the electrical grid extended into this remote corner of B.C. Cheap
grid power promises to make economical many of the low-grade copper
deposits that have been known about for many decades, but “sterilized”
due to remote geography.

Read full article

Share

The Industrialization of British Columbia

Share

From TideChange.ca – Dec. 11, 2010

by Ray Grigg

To many British Columbians, “Super, Natural British Columbia” was a reassuring slogan. At least it tacitly recognized the incredible beauty and the astounding ecological diversity of BC – one of the most biologically diverse regions on the planet. Implicit in this marketing slogan was the promise that BC’s remarkable scenery and richness would be acknowledged as an invaluable and irreplaceable public asset.

So the shift in marketing to “The Best Place On Earth” should have been noted with foreboding, primarily because the expression is too vague to mean anything in particular. Is it “The Best Place On Earth” to gamble? To ship illegal immigrants? To get rich by unregulated speculation? To export raw logs? To operate polluting mines? To drill for methane and gas? To build pipelines? To open new tanker routes for shipping oil to Asia?

The emphasis during the last decade in British Columbia has shifted away from “Super, Natural” toward industrialization. The change has never been official, never publicly declared or explicitly decided by plebiscite or election. But governance of the province has abetted this shift with the relaxation of regulations, with the weakening of oversight, and with environmental assessments becoming little more than ritualistic exercises invariably favouring industrial development over conservation and precautionary measures. The shift has been gradual and pervasive. But not so subtle for the few British Columbians who have noted the signs. Many more, however, are now aware of the loosened rules, the auctioned resources, the changed landscapes, and the exploited places in which everything natural seems to be for sale.

Read full article here

Share