The Daily Courier

U.S. wants Canada to join cross-border pollution probe

- By BOB WEBER

The United States government, including President Joe Biden’s White House, has joined calls for Canada to participat­e in a probe of cross-border pollution coming from coal mines in southern British Columbia.

In a statement released last week, the U.S. State Department said Biden supports a joint investigat­ion of selenium coming from Teck Resource’s Elk Valley coal mines, which flows into rivers and lakes south of the border.

“The (State) Department reaffirmed the administra­tion’s support for a joint reference to the Internatio­nal Joint Commission under the Boundary Waters Treaty of 1909 for the Kootenai Basin regarding the transbound­ary impacts of mining,” says the statement issued Wednesday.

Global Affairs Canada did not immediatel­y respond to a request for a response. On June 2, spokesman Adrien Blanchard said in an email that Canada was “considerin­g a variety of options.”

The U.S. has been concerned about the Teck mines for years. The states of Montana and Idaho, eight American senators, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, the U.S. Geological Survey and six First Nations from both sides of the border have all said selenium released by the mines threaten fish in their downstream waters.

Several of those groups have requested a reference from the Internatio­nal Joint Commission, which tries to mediate transbound­ary water disputes. References, an examinatio­n of the problem followed by recommenda­tions, have almost always been conducted by both countries together.

Canada and the U.S., through the commission, have worked jointly on problems in the Great Lakes, Lake Champlain in Quebec and the Souris River basin in Manitoba.

The commission has said it’s willing to look at the matter and has asked Canada to participat­e. Now, the State Department has echoed that request.

In its release, it says Canada’s participat­ion in an Elk Valley reference would lead to “impartial recommenda­tions and transparen­t communicat­ion, build trust, and forge a common understand­ing of this issue among local, Indigenous, state, provincial, and federal government­s as well as stakeholde­rs and the public in both countries.”

The release emphasizes First Nation concerns, underscori­ng “the Biden-Harris Administra­tion’s commitment to strengthen­ing Nation-to-Nation relationsh­ips.”

“Support for a joint IJC reference reflects the Biden-Harris Administra­tion’s commitment to protect public health; conserve our lands, waters, and biodiversi­ty; and deliver environmen­tal justice to communitie­s overburden­ed by pollution.”

The government release was preceded by a statement from the six Ktunaxa First Nations in the area, which have been asking Canada to join the reference since December.

“We’re demanding meaningful dialogue,” said Nasukin Gravelle of the Tobacco Plains First Nation.

“The missing piece here is Canada’s seeming refusal to participat­e in a joint reference submission to get the ball rolling on viable, science-based solutions. It’s a disappoint­ment and a sad day for reconcilia­tion when progress on dealing with the pollution of our waterways is blocked by a federal government.”

Teck has acknowledg­ed the problem.

The company has spent $1.2 billion on water treatment and plans to spend a further $750 million. It says about 95% of selenium is now removed from water.

However, it has protested what it calls unreasonab­ly low selenium limits brought in by Montana. It says those limits, which apply to the reservoir shared by both countries, are even lower than natural selenium levels in upstream rivers.

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