Los Angeles Times

Mine in Alaska clears key hurdle

Foes of Alaska gold and copper pit accuse Trump administra­tion of ignoring science in the review process.

- By Richard Read

Foes of the Pebble Mine, a gold and copper pit, accuse the Trump administra­tion of ignoring the science during review process.

SEATTLE — The Trump administra­tion has lifted a major hurdle for developmen­t of a massive gold and copper mine in the wilds of Alaska despite fears that it will poison the world’s largest sockeye salmon run.

Pebble Mine, which would become an open pit the size of 460 football fields at the headwaters of Bristol Bay, has long been opposed by environmen­talists and the commercial fishing industry.

But in a final environmen­tal impact statement released Friday, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers concluded that the mine “would not be expected to have a measurable effect on fish numbers” or “result in long-term changes to the health of the commercial fisheries.”

That clears the way for the Corps to issue a permit this year to Northern Dynasty Minerals Ltd., the Canadian company proposing the mine on state land.

The company must also secure numerous state permits, and opposition from Native entities and other groups could tie up the project in court battles. It is also possible that the federal government could reverse course if Trump loses the presidency this fall.

Still, the new report is a setback for the project’s opponents, who accuse the Trump administra­tion of politicizi­ng a review process as part of a broader national campaign to roll back decades of environmen­tal protection­s.

“The Army Corps’ conclusion that all of this will have ‘no measurable effect’ on Bristol Bay’s salmon fishery would be laughable if it weren’t so disturbing,” said Taryn Kiekow Heimer, a Natural Resources Defense Council senior advocate.

“The Trump administra­tion just ran roughshod over the input it received from its own agencies, independen­t scientists, Bristol Bay tribes and commercial fishermen.”

In Alaska, a strongly prodevelop­ment state, the Pebble Mine is deeply unpopular, with 62% of voters in a recent poll opposing it — mainly because of fears that it would harm the $1.5-billion Bristol Bay salmon fishery, which supports 14,500 jobs.

“For the Army Corps to rubber-stamp a massive, toxic open-pit mine in the headwaters of a national food source just doesn’t make sense,” said Andy Wink, executive director of the Bristol Bay Regional Seafood Developmen­t Assn. “What the Pebble Partnershi­p has proposed is essentiall­y one big experiment with no real science or data to back it up.”

But Tom Collier, chief executive of Pebble Limited Partnershi­p, the U.S. subsidiary of Northern Dynasty, said Friday that the Corps’ process was “extensive, rigorous and transparen­t,” and not in fact rushed, taking more than two years — which he said was about average for environmen­tal reviews in Alaska.

“Unequivoca­lly, repeatedly, the document concludes, as the draft did, that we’re not going to do any damage to this fishery, period,” Collier said. “We changed the project to address environmen­talists’ concerns, and the project we took into permitting had been ‘de-risked.’ ”

In a scientific review conducted under the Obama administra­tion, the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency found that the mine could result in “significan­t and unacceptab­le adverse effects” on fishery areas and ecological­ly important streams, wetlands, lakes and ponds.

Under the current proposal, developmen­t of the mine would destroy more than 2,000 acres of wetlands and more than 100 miles of streams.

Tailings from the mine would be heaped across 2,800 acres behind dams extending more than 10 miles. In a region that averages 50 inches of rain a year, the challenge would be to ensure that tainted water never reached Bristol Bay.

The mine could generate up to $1 billion a year in sales of gold, copper, molybdenum and other commoditie­s. Once permits are secured, industry experts expect North Dynasty to sell the claim to a larger mining company.

One controvers­ial element of the project was a plan to use ice-breaking ferries to haul ore 18 miles across Iliamna Lake — before trucking it an additional 37 miles on a new road through bear habitat to a port to be built at Cook Inlet.

The opponents of that plan included environmen­talists, who said ferries would disturb a colony of freshwater seals, as well as Native villages, whose residents drive across the ice during winter for supplies.

Apparently heeding those concerns, the new assessment by the Corps instead backs an 82-mile road north of Iliamna Lake to a different port site as the “least environmen­tally damaging practicabl­e alternativ­e.”

The two-lane road, with 17 bridges, would be flanked by a pipeline that would bring natural gas from across Cook Inlet for a 270megawat­t power plant at the mine. But that route presents another challenge. Three Native corporatio­ns own rights to the land, and they say it’s not for sale.

“Their insistence on pushing this impractica­l route forward, which is reliant on lands not open to Pebble developmen­t, disrespect­fully ignores our tribal sovereignt­y,” the Igiugig Village Council said in a statement Friday.

Collier said Friday it was not unusual for projects to receive permits despite outstandin­g property issues.

“Now we’re in a situation that it’s incumbent on us to convince these landowners that they should in fact cooperate with the project and allow the northern route,” he said.

‘What the Pebble Partnershi­p has proposed is essentiall­y one big experiment with no real science or data to back it up.’ — Andy Wink, executive director of the Bristol Bay Regional Seafood Developmen­t Assn.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? AN EMPLOYEE of Northern Dynasty Minerals at a drilling rig near Iliamna, Alaska. The Canadian company is proposing to develop Pebble Mine, which has long been opposed by environmen­talists and fisheries.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times AN EMPLOYEE of Northern Dynasty Minerals at a drilling rig near Iliamna, Alaska. The Canadian company is proposing to develop Pebble Mine, which has long been opposed by environmen­talists and fisheries.

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