Arab Times

Rare wildflower could imperil ‘lithium mine’

‘Mitigation plan’

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RENO, Nev, Aug 5, (AP): A botanist hired by a company planning to mine one of the most promising deposits of lithium in the world believes a rare desert wildflower at the Nevada site should be protected under the Endangered Species Act, a move that could jeopardize the project, new documents show.

The unusually candid disclosure is included in more than 500 pages of emails obtained by conservati­onists and reviewed by The Associated Press regarding Ioneer Ltd’s plans to dig near the only population of Tiehm’s buckwheat known to exist on earth.

Six months of communicat­ions between government scientists, Ioneer’s representa­tives and University of Nevada, Reno researcher­s studying the plant also show the director of UNR’s work – financed by Ioneer – repeatedly pushed back against company pressure to prematurel­y publicize early success of efforts to grow buckwheat seedlings in a campus greenhouse for replanting in the wild.

“I’m not used to such a focus on inprogress research,” Beth Leger, a biology professor who also heads UNR’s Museum of Natural History, wrote in April.

“I feel like maybe one very important thing isn’t clear, and that’s that these plants could die at any stage of

this experiment.”

Strategy

The experiment is part of Ioneer’s strategy intended to help avert a federal listing of the plant that could scuttle the mine.

The Center for Biological Diversity, which petitioned last year to list the plant under the Endangered Species Act, obtained the documents under a Nevada public records request. It’s public informatio­n because of UNR’s research contract.

The US Fish and Wildlife Service recently announced it’s received enough scientific informatio­n to warrant a full-year review of the buckwheat’s status 200 miles (320 kilometers) southeast of Reno to determine whether it should be federally protected.

The emails include an April exchange with a Fish and Wildlife official who shared concerns expressed by the head of Nevada’s own state listing review about Ioneer’s transplant­ing strategy.

“This document is at best a mitigation plan, certainly not a ‘protection plan,’” James Morefield, supervisor­y botanist for Nevada’s Division of Natural Heritage, wrote to the service April 16.

Ioneer has spent millions at the site rich with lithium needed to manufactur­e such things as batteries for Tesla’s electric cars. That includes UNR’s $60,000 grant to study transplant­s and $168,000 for five years of monitoring.

Ioneer President Bernard Rowe told AP in March their plans “will ensure protection and, in fact, the expansion of the buckwheat population.”

The emails offer a behind-the-scenes look at the sensitive relationsh­ip between public institutio­ns and private companies funding research they often have a stake in. They indicate UNR scientists and a private one at EM Strategies – Ioneer’s consultant – believe the propagatio­n efforts could benefit the plant, but don’t yet prove they could ensure its survival.

“Nothing we are researchin­g is a quick fix, or even a fix. There isn’t a fix for this type of impact,” EM Strategies’ biology manager Kris Kuyper wrote to a UNR researcher Jan 7.

“I’m sure it will be listed (it should be), then it will be a matter of consultati­on with the USFWS,” she said.

Kuyper was responding to a UNR researcher’s concerns about providing informatio­n for a news release Ioneer’s PR firm wanted to issue touting the success of the plant regenerati­on study.

“I wouldn’t want them trying to frame our work in a way that would imply listing is unnecessar­y, or that concern for the population­s that would be impacted by mining is unfounded because they may be able to be relocated,” wrote the UNR researcher whose name was redacted. “Even if we get encouragin­g initial results from the propagatio­n and transplant efforts, we wouldn’t know whether that is truly possible to establish a new population, potentiall­y for years.”

The slow-growing flowers have fragile roots that dry out easily. As for transplant­s, Leger told AP then, “I don’t think it’s an awesome idea.”

The emails suggest growing frustratio­n among the researcher­s over what they viewed as interferen­ce with their work.

“Ioneer’s press people reached out AGAIN, they seemingly want to publish a blow-by-blow as the research goes on,” Leger wrote Kuyper in February.

When Ioneer’s PR firm made another media request March 4, Leger responded, “I’d like to wait... (for) actual results.”

On March 6 she wrote Kuyper, “My advice is that they just let the scientific process roll forward . ... You can’t count your chickens before they hatch!”

Patrick Donnelly, the Center for Biological Diversity’s Nevada director, said the emails underscore the “highly experiment­al, highly uncertain” nature of the transplant strategy.

“Ioneer has portrayed their mitigation as a sure-fire bet to save the buckwheat,” he said. He maintains Ioneer’s current plans would wipe out the plant’s entire population and that a federal listing “would mean an end to the mine.”

The company said last week it is “committed to being good stewards of the environmen­t and working in lockstep with State of Nevada and Federal oversight bodies.”

“As such, we have retained the most reputable, independen­t and unbiased research team available,” Ioneer said in a statement emailed to AP. “This work is informing our efforts to protect Tiehm’s buckwheat in its natural habitat and help set a path forward to produce critical minerals necessary to reduce greenhouse gas emissions globally.”

Leger said in an email Friday to AP that her job is to “present the informatio­n to decision makers, who can then make fully-informed choices about how to best protect it.” Donnelly countered: “This is science being done to greenwash a mine . ... It appears that is not Dr Leger’s intention, but it is very much Ioneer’s intention.”

Plans

Also:

MAASAI MARA, Kenya: One of nature’s most spectacula­r sights, East Africa’s great wildebeest migration, went largely unwatched this year as the effects of the coronaviru­s pandemic are felt as far as the continent’s wilderness.

Travel restrictio­ns kept tourists away for the annual wildlife migration in Kenya’s Maasai Mara National Reserve and only a handful of guides and park wardens were there to watch thousands of wildebeest antelopes make their famous trek in search of new grazing pastures.

Tour guide Milton Siloma has worked in the world-famous reserve on Kenya’s southern border for 30 years and said he’s never seen it so quiet.

“We are alone,” he said. “We are supposed to have thousands and thousands of tourists around watching this phenomenon.”

Although the absence of tourists makes little difference to the giant herd of wildebeest moving between Kenya and neighborin­g Tanzania, it’s a serious problem for the park, the local government and the surroundin­g community.

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