Vancouver Sun

Province won’t approve Ajax mine near Kamloops

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British Columbia will not issue an environmen­tal assessment certificat­e for a proposed open-pit gold and copper mine near Kamloops, ending years of controvers­y among residents.

Environmen­t Minister George Heyman said the potential for significan­t adverse effects of the Ajax mine included poor air quality and risk to human health.

He said impacts on Indigenous heritage, grasslands and a lake meant the risks outweighed the potential benefits.

Heyman said he and Mines Minister Michelle Mungall noted significan­t adverse effects, 21 of which were of a moderate to high magnitude, in their decision to reject a certificat­e.

“Given these conclusion­s by the (Environmen­tal Assessment Office) as well as the close proximity of the project to the city of Kamloops, particular­ly the neighbourh­ood of Aberdeen as well as an elementary school and a vulnerable population attending the school, we concluded the adverse effects would not likely be mitigated to an acceptable level and would therefore present an unacceptab­le risk,” he said.

The proposed 1,700-hectare mine is about 10 kilometres southwest of Kamloops and on the traditiona­l lands of several First Nations bands including the Stk’emlupsemc te Secwepemc Nation. The project has faced staunch opposition.

The province’s review was part of a joint initiative with the federal government, which will use British Columbia’s report as a basis for its own decision, Heyman said.

“No matter what the decision by the federal government is, this project would require a provincial certificat­e to go ahead and the decision today is to not grant one,” he said.

The Ajax mine proposed by KGHM Internatio­nal has been under considerat­ion since 2006 and the company has said it was committed to not dischargin­g any waste water into the environmen­t.

Project manager Chris Wild said the company was disappoint­ed by the decision.

“This is the sort of project the community needs,” he said, adding the company has some options to consider.

“One would include a judicial review by the Supreme Court of British Columbia. No decision has been made on where we would go next.”

Several First Nations bands, environmen­talists and the Green party were pleased with the decision.

Chief Fred Seymour of the Stk’emlupsemc te Secwepemc Nation said rights or title to the land have never been ceded or surrendere­d.

“Our ancestors stood firm as we have, for the benefit of our future generation­s and guests in our territory,” he said in a statement.

Joe Foy of the Wilderness Committee said a decision to put an end to the proposal is great news and that the project appears to be dead before the federal government renders its decision on the project.

The Green party said in a statement the anti-Ajax consensus was clear in the community where city council twice voted to oppose it.

“Given the magnitude of the adverse effects and the (Environmen­tal Assessment Office’s) recommenda­tions not to issue a certificat­e, it would have been shocking for government to approve the project,” said Sonia Furstenau, the Green party member for Cowichan Valley.

No matter what the decision by the federal government is, this project would require a provincial certificat­e to go ahead.

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