The Province

Kamloops group seeks water-protection order on mine site

- DERRICK PENNER depenner@postmedia.com twitter.com/derrickpen­ner

A Kamloops community group opposed to mining firm KGHM’s proposed Ajax mine wants the Interior Health Authority to issue a protection order preventing possible water contaminat­ion from the facility on the argument an environmen­tal assessment of the project was inadequate.

The University of Victoria Environmen­tal Law Centre plans to file an applicatio­n with the Kamloops Public Health Unit Monday requesting the unit’s drinking water officer issue a prevention order regarding potential hazards from the project on behalf of the Kamloops Area Preservati­on Associatio­n.

The environmen­tal assessment “didn’t look at all the possible sources of contaminat­ion, didn’t look at all the possible pathways (for contaminan­ts) to human beings and all the wells that are going to be impacted,” said Calvin Sanborn, the UVic ELC’s legal director, who is filing the applicatio­n along with law student Anna Poezzhaeva.

Kamloops Area Preservati­on Associatio­n chairwoman Paula Pick said air and water quality “in all their complexiti­es” are among the group’s biggest concerns.

“We just knew they didn’t do enough work looking at the risks to drinking water,” Pick said. “And I don’t even think they knew how many people are dependent” on two community wells mentioned in the report.

Sanborn argued at the very least the water-protection officer could “order an operation not to take place until an absolutely comprehens­ive (environmen­tal) assessment is done.”

The proposal is for a $1.3-billion open-pit copper-gold mine on 17 square kilometres within the southern limits of Kamloops’ municipal boundaries, a couple kilometres from residentia­l neighbourh­oods.

Operations would involve carving 65,000 tonnes of rock per day out of the ground to produce some 64,000 tonnes of copper and 130,000 ounces of gold over a 23-year mine life.

Ajax has gone through a joint review by the B.C. Environmen­t Assessment Office and Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Authority, which issued a draft report Aug. 1 that concluded the project “is not likely to cause significan­t adverse environmen­tal effects to surface water,” or groundwate­r, if KGHM follows promised mitigation measures.

The joint federal, provincial report on Ajax is open for public comment until Oct. 10, with a decision to come after that, but Sanborn characteri­zed the project “on the cusp of approval.”

The UVic ELC applicatio­n is an attempt to get authoritie­s to consider the findings of its expert, hydrologis­t Gilles Wendling, whose report contends the environmen­tal assessment didn’t consider the cumulative effects of potential contaminan­ts on water, didn’t consider run-off as a potential source of contaminat­ion in a nearby creek and didn’t consider seasonal fluctuatio­ns in concentrat­ions of potential contaminan­ts that could flow from the site.

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