Proposal aims to address pollution
Cross-border initiative with Indigenous groups will fight contamination from B.C. coal mines
The U.S., Canada and several Indigenous groups announced a proposal on Monday to address the pollution from coal mining in British Columbia that’s been contaminating waterways and harming fisheries on both sides of the border for years.
The proposal would be executed through a century-old U.S.-Canada boundary waters treaty, establishing independent boards to study the pollution’s extent and make cleanup recommendations.
Details were obtained by The Associated Press in advance of the proposal’s public release. It comes after Indigenous groups in British Columbia, Montana and Idaho lobbied for more than a decade for the federal governments in the U.S. and Canada to intervene and stop the flow of pollution.
Scientists from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency several years ago confirmed high levels of selenium in fish and eggs in Montana’s Kootenai River downstream of Lake Koocanusa, which straddles the U.S.-Canada border. The chemical, released when coal is mined and washed during processing, can be toxic to fish, aquatic insects and the birds that feed on them.
Some members of the Ktunaxa Nation — which includes two tribes in the U.S. and four First Nations in
Canada — depend on those fish populations for sustenance.
“The fish, especially the smaller ones, you see a lot of damage. You’re starting to get abnormalities in their bodies, reproductive issues,” said Tom McDonald, vice-chair of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes in northwestern Montana.
“It has to stop.” Selenium concentrations in water entering Lake Koocanusa have been increasing for decades, and studies have shown it’s coming from coal mines in the Elk River Valley of British Columbia. The Elk River drains into the Kootenai before it crosses the border into Montana, then flows into Idaho and eventually joins the Columbia River.
Diplomatic groundwork for Monday’s proposal was laid last year, when U.S. President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau expresseded in March 2023 their hopes to reach an “agreement in principle” in partnership with tribes and First Nations to reduce the pollution in the Elk-Kootenai watershed in the following months.
“All the parties know that time is of the essence,” said Stephenne Harding, senior director for lands at the White House Council on Environmental Quality.
“The pollution levels in this system are increasing and we need shared solutions to protect people and species. This process helps bring together all the data and the knowledge … so we have it in one place where we can make important decisions.”
The proposal calls for no more than two years of study to gauge the extent of pollution. The goal is to develop a plan to reduce pollution impacts “as quickly as possible,” said U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Rachel Poynter.
“This is a first step and we recognize that, but it is a critical key first step,” Poynter said.