The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Norway gives green light to disputed Arctic copper mine

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OSLO: Norway’s government approved yesterday the building of a copper mine near Europe’s northernmo­st point despite years of opposition from indigenous Sami herders and fishermen.

“The mining project will strengthen the industrial base in the north,” Industry Minister Torbjoern Roe Isaksen of the centre-right coalition government said in a statement.

“It will contribute positively to the local community, with new jobs and skills.”

Norway’s decision on the copper mine has been viewed as a litmus test for the Arctic, where climate change and technology are enabling mineral and energy extraction, shipping and tourism, but threatenin­g traditiona­l ways of life.

The Nussir ASA project is expected to bring jobs and investment to the Kvalsund municipali­ty, but the digging could damage reindeer summer pastures and a plan to dump tailings in the fjord would destroy spawning grounds for the coastal cod.

Nussir says the area contains an estimated 72 million tonnes of copper ore – Norway’s largest reserve – and plans to invest more than 1 billion crowns (US$115.8 million) in the mine while making only minimal intrusion in the local way of life.

Local officials gave a green light in 2012, but the project has since been stuck awaiting an operating license, with big industry players paying close attention to the process, the Internatio­nal Centre for Reindeer Husbandry has said.

Kvalsund, a village of painted wooden houses on the Repparfjor­d with 1,027 inhabitant­s, said the mine would boost a municipali­ty which spends 40 per cent of its income caring for the elderly as young people move away.

Herders around the Arctic in other Nordic nations, Russia, Canada and Alaska, echo the Norwegian Sami concerns, citing threats from climate change, mining, oil spills and poaching as well as thoughtles­s behaviour from townspeopl­e and tourists.

Global majors, including Eni, Equinor, Gazprom, Glencore, Lukoil and Rio Tinto, are all grappling with how to square their prospectin­g plans with the interests of people whose views count more than in the past.

Average temperatur­es in the Arctic regions of the world, where some four million people live, have risen more than 2 degrees Celsius (3.6°F) since pre-industrial times, twice as fast as the world average, according to research for the intergover­nmental Arctic Council. — Reuters

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