Times Colonist

U.S. increasing­ly concerned over pollution from B.C. mines

- BOB WEBER

The U.S. government is increasing­ly concerned with pollution from British Columbia mines following new research that shows contaminan­ts in a river south of the border came from Canada.

In a letter obtained by the Canadian Press, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency is demanding the provincial government hand over data explaining why Teck Resources coal mines in southern B.C are being allowed to exceed guidelines for a toxic heavy metal.

“The EPA … finds it unacceptab­le that the province has accepted [a treatment plan] that will allow seasonal exceedance­s of water quality objectives into the future,” says the Feb. 4 letter to B.C. Environmen­t Minister George Heyman.

“An independen­t review could help facilitate U.S. stakeholde­r confidence in this new approach.”

Contaminat­ion from Teck’s mines in the rivers of the Elk River watershed is a longstandi­ng problem. Coal mining releases selenium, an element which in large amounts is toxic to wildlife and humans.

Reports on selenium concentrat­ions in area waterways show levels up to four times B.C.’s maximum for drinking water. Monitoring stations near the mines have reported levels 50 times what’s recommende­d for aquatic health.

Teck’s own research recently reported the near-disappeara­nce of rare cutthroat trout from a 60-kilometre stretch of the Fording River downstream from the company’s four mines.

That water flows into the cross-border Koocanusa Reservoir. The reservoir drains into the Kootenai River, which flows about 200 kilometres across Montana and Idaho.

Research by the U.S. Geological Survey found selenium in that stretch of the Kootenai, but none in its American tributarie­s.

“The Kootenai River downstream of the Libby Dam is being affected by the Elk Valley mines,” says the EPA letter. “The study provides validated informatio­n that is concerning to U.S. agencies and our state and tribal partners.”

Agency spokesman Richard Mylott said the U.S. is also worried about a new provincial­ly approved water treatment process.

“The effectiven­ess of this new technology … has not been demonstrat­ed at the geographic scale and multi-decade time scale needed to abate pollution from Elk River coal mines,” he said in an email.

The U.S., he said, wants to judge for itself.

“[The agency] … concluded it would be important to have U.S. mine remediatio­n technical experts independen­tly review the likely effectiven­ess of this technology.”

In a written response, B.C. environmen­t spokesman Jeremy Uppenborn said the province “is working with the U.S. EPA and Teck to provide the requested informatio­n.”

A Teck spokesman has said the company plans to spend more than $1 billion by 2024 to clean up its effluent. Doug Brown said selenium levels should start to drop by the end of this year.

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