Chattanooga Times Free Press

Ossoff opposes Okefenokee mining proposal

- BY DREW KANN

In pointed remarks delivered Friday night, U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff again urged state officials to block a controvers­ial plan to mine for titanium at the edge of the ecological­ly sensitive Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge.

“I’m calling today on the state of Georgia to reject strip mining near the Okefenokee Wildlife Refuge,” he said.

Ossoff’s speech was delivered during the Georgia Rivers Gala, a fundraisin­g event in Atlanta hosted by the Georgia River Network, a nonprofit that protects waterways statewide and is opposed to the mine. Ossoff also name-checked the Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division, which is in charge of reviewing the company’s permit applicatio­ns, and said there is “clear and convincing evidence” that the mining plan does not meet the state’s standards.

The Alabama company behind the mining project, Twin Pines Minerals, is seeking to extract titanium on a 580-acre tract of Trail Ridge, an ancient inland sand dune complex that forms the eastern boundary of the swamp.

The Okefenokee is a critical habitat for hundreds of species — including some that are endangered — and draws more than 700,000 tourists a year. It also holds millions of tons of peat deposits, preventing huge amounts of heattrappi­ng carbon dioxide from escaping into the atmosphere.

Twin Pines has said repeatedly its analyses show that the 50-foot deep pit it plans to dig and the thousands of gallons of groundwate­r it will pump from the underlying aquifer will not harm the fragile swamp ecosystem.

But environmen­talists and a prominent hydrologis­t from the University of Georgia, Rhett Jackson, disagree, arguing the mine will lower water levels in the swamp and increase the risk for intense wildfires.

Earlier this year, scientists with the federal National Park Service also questioned the company’s claims.

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