Albuquerque Journal

NM court considers copper mine rules

Disagreeme­nt over regulation­s on groundwate­r pollution

- BY SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

Environmen­talists say New Mexico isn’t going far enough to protect the state’s limited groundwate­r supplies from copper mining operations.

Regulators counter that the state has the toughest rules in the West.

After years of legal wrangling, both sides made their points Wednesday in arguments to the New Mexico Supreme Court.

Environmen­talists want the court to require the state to adopt new regulation­s to prevent pollution.

The state Water Quality Act requires regulation­s that prevent or abate pollution, but the rules in place specifical­ly allow the copper mining industry to pollute groundwate­r, said Doug Meiklejohn, an attorney and executive director of the New Mexico Environmen­tal Law Center.

Upholding the most basic premise of the law makes sense because the majority of New Mexicans depend on groundwate­r sources for their drinking water, he said.

The New Mexico Environmen­t Department has long argued that the regulation­s are among the most stringent of any copper-producing state in the West and strike a balance between protecting water and allowing economic developmen­t.

The Legislatur­e amended the act in 2009 to allow the Water Quality Control Commission to adopt regulation­s involving the copper industry to prevent water pollution and monitor water quality.

Environmen­t Secretary Butch Tongate called the previous rule outdated and inconsiste­nt.

“Opponents of the copper rule would prefer to shut down mining in New Mexico — destroying jobs and devastatin­g communitie­s — than offer support for the copper rule,” Tongate said, in a statement.

He pointed to a previous decision by an appeals court that upheld the rule, which includes engineerin­g requiremen­ts for handling leftover rock, leach piles, tanks and pipelines.

Watchdog groups and Ted Turner’s Ladder Ranch had argued that the regulation­s give mining companies too much leeway to pollute. In 2015, the appellate court ruled those claims were unfounded.

Opponents had also complained that the crafting of the rules was influenced by the mining industry. State officials disputed that claim.

Southweste­rn New Mexico is home to three copper mines owned by Freeport-McMoRan, the world’s largest publicly traded copper producer. In 2015, the company’s New Mexico operations generated an estimated $176 million in economic benefits for Grant County and about $422 million for the state overall.

The mines in the Silver City area employ more than 1,400 people.

Company officials said they are better able to plan for future investment­s and operations because the rule applies consistent standards for preventing or managing the effects of mining on groundwate­r.

 ?? RICHARD PIPES/JOURNAL ?? Freeport-McMoRan is working at getting the Santa Rita copper mine near Silver City ready for full-time mining.
RICHARD PIPES/JOURNAL Freeport-McMoRan is working at getting the Santa Rita copper mine near Silver City ready for full-time mining.

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