Los Angeles Times

An EPA gift to the mining industry

The agency’s decision not to block a massive open-pit mine in Alaska threatens the environmen­t.

- Ust five years

Jago, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency determined that a proposal to dig a massive open-pit copper and gold mine near southwest Alaska’s Bristol Bay — one of the world’s most important salmon fisheries — threatened an environmen­tal disaster. So it issued rules to severely curtail the potential project. What a difference an election makes. Shortly after President Trump’s appointee, Scott Pruitt, took over the EPA in 2017, he met with the chief executive of Pebble Limited Partnershi­p, owned by Canadabase­d Northern Dynasty Minerals, and then just hours later rescinded the Obama administra­tion directive to protect the sensitive wetland area from mining activities. Pruitt later backed off and sent the action for a fuller regulatory review — and then quit his job under a storm of criticism about ethical lapses.

But the EPA has continued Pruitt’s campaign to loosen environmen­tal restrictio­ns and greenlight controvers­ial projects, and on Tuesday the agency announced that it would not use its veto authority under the Clean Water Act to block the mine. That frees the Army Corps of Engineers to decide whether or not to approve the project. (Interestin­gly, the Army corps’ preliminar­y environmen­tal analysis of the project was criticized as insufficie­nt by a Seattle-based EPA official — the same one who, apparently under pressure from superiors in Washington, D.C., rescinded the Obama-era directive. Yes, it can make your head spin.)

Environmen­talists, including Natural Resources Defense Council attorney Joel Reynolds, accuse the EPA of abandoning its own findings and opening the door for the Trump administra­tion to deliver a “gift to a foreign mining corporatio­n at the expense of Bristol Bay’s fish, aquatic resources and community.” We would add that the EPA has also abandoned common sense.

Mining is an exceedingl­y messy endeavor which historical­ly has ravaged landscapes and caused significan­t environmen­tal degradatio­n — just the kind of thing the federal government’s environmen­tal watchdogs are supposed to protect against. The agency’s absurd decision to reverse itself and let the Pebble Mine permitting process proceed must be undone either through an unlikely reconsider­ation by the EPA, legal challenges, or, best yet, rejecting Trump and his cockamamie and dangerous approaches to economic developmen­t in the 2020 election.

What’s at stake in Alaska? The proposal is for an open-pit mine and support operations with a potential footprint as large as Manhattan, and a pit descending nearly threequart­ers as deep as the Grand Canyon, according to an EPA analysis (which the developers have disputed). Even if it were only half that size, that is an extraordin­ary amount of environmen­tal degradatio­n at the mine site itself, which would include massive pits to hold millions of tons of mine waste and other leftovers of the mining process — much of it laden with toxic chemicals.

And the site is near two rivers that empty into Bristol Bay, which means that not only would the project destroy thousands of acres of near-pristine habitat and wetlands at the mining site, but it would also imperil the environmen­tal health of Bristol Bay itself — something the Obama EPA recognized. As have the people of Alaska: 65% approved a measure in 2014 that gives the state Legislatur­e veto power over future projects in the Bristol Bay watershed if it determines that the salmon fishery is at risk, a veto it ought to keep handy should federal regulators allow this mine to proceed.

There’s the friction point. Bristol Bay supports a vibrant, long-running economy based on a sustainabl­e fishery — 14,000 jobs in a $1.5 billion-a-year economy, according to some estimates — as well as tourism and other non-extractive businesses. Allowing the mine to go forward would sacrifice the existing and more environmen­tally friendly economy for gold and copper extraction that could be disastrous for the environmen­t.

The Trump administra­tion is playing favorites here. Its affection for extractive industries has already put hundreds of thousands of acres of public lands in the West in play for invasive mining leases for oil, gas, uranium and just about anything else of value the mining industry can find. And yes, many of these materials are vital to economic developmen­t. But the Trump administra­tion has earned the nation’s skepticism over whether, in adopting policies and weighing proposed projects, it can be relied upon to shepherd our natural resources in a balanced, sustainabl­e and sensible manner.

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