Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

EPA allows mine company to pursue permits near Alaska bay

- BECKY BOHRER Contributi­ng to this report were Associated Press reporters Michael Biesecker in Washington, D.C., and Ellen Knickmeyer in San Francisco.

JUNEAU, Alaska - In a sharp reversal, the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency has cleared a way for the company seeking to develop a massive copper and gold deposit near the headwaters of a world-class salmon fishery in southwest Alaska to pursue permits.

As part of a court settlement with the Pebble Limited Partnershi­p, the EPA agreed to begin the process of withdrawin­g proposed restrictio­ns on developmen­t in the Bristol Bay region, an area that produces about half of the world’s sockeye salmon.

The agreement, signed Thursday but released on Friday, comes four months into the Trump administra­tion, which supporters of the proposed Pebble Mine hoped would give it a fairer shake than they believed they received under President Barack Obama.

The mining industry has seen promising signs from the administra­tion, including a willingnes­s to take a different look at projects and to review regulation­s seen as overly burdensome, said Luke Popovich, a spokesman for the National Mining Associatio­n.

“I think the public is in no danger of seeing genuine environmen­tal protection diminished,” he said.

Environmen­tal groups see the Pebble agreement as potentiall­y giving a go-ahead to industry to challenge EPA actions or to seek permits about which they previously might have been uncertain.

“It obviously sends a psychologi­cal message to big mining companies that if they were nervous about getting permits in the past . . . that this is their golden opportunit­y to get their mine through the process,” said Brett Hartl, government affairs director for the Center for Biological Diversity environmen­tal group.

Critics of the Pebble settlement called it a backdoor deal and a slap in the face to residents of the region who petitioned the EPA in hopes of securing environmen­tal protection­s.

Pebble sued in federal court over what it claimed was EPA’s collusion with mine opponents to block the project, after an EPA study concluded large-scale mining posed significan­t risk to salmon in the Bristol Bay region and could adversely affect Alaska Natives in the region, whose culture is built around salmon.

In a release, EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt said the agreement “will not guarantee or prejudge a particular outcome, but will provide Pebble a fair process for their permit applicatio­n and help steer EPA away from costly and timeconsum­ing litigation.”

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