Los Angeles Times

This desert wants to stay in the dark

Astronomer­s and mine builders collide over the possible effect of floodlight­s.

- National@latimes.com

Southern Arizona’s dark skies establishe­d the region as an internatio­nal hub for astronomy in the 1960s. Observator­ies and other sky-gazing research facilities have brought prestige — and millions of dollars — to the state.

Today, riches on the ground — or, more specifical­ly, below it — also have the potential to enrich the state, resulting in an odd collision between mining and astronomy.

Since 2007, when Rosemont Copper, which is owned by Canada’s Augusta Resource Co., announced its plans to build a mine in the desert just south of Tucson, the environmen­tal community has warned that the project will devastate the desert landscape.

But when the mine released its draft environmen­tal impact statement in 2009 and revealed its lighting plan for the mine, another group joined the fray: the Internatio­nal Dark-sky Assn. and the numerous astronomer­s whose research — and livelihood­s — depend on the desert’s dark skies.

“The [mine’s] impact on astronomy is potentiall­y very, very significan­t,” said Scott Kardel, public affairs director of the associatio­n, a Tucson-based nonprofit that has worked to preserve and protect the darkness of night skies since 1988.

Because the mine would operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week, nighttime floodlight­s required by federal safety requiremen­ts could create significan­t light pollution that would interfere with astronomy.

The site of the proposed Rosemont Copper Mine is 12 miles northeast of the Fred Lawrence Whipple Observator­y, known for its Multiple Mirror Telescope and work in ground-based gamma-ray astronomy.

“The initial lighting estimate of the [mine’s] light output was very bad,” said Emilio Falco, project director at the Whipple Observator­y, which is part of the Harvard-smithsonia­n Center for Astrophysi­cs.

According to that initial estimate, the mine’s lumen output — the measure of the amount of visible light emitted by a source — would be 21.7 million lumens, or the equivalent of about 12,000 houses.

The scientific community and the industries that cater to the astronomer­s were alarmed. In 2007, a study conducted by the University of Arizona estimated that astronomy contribute­d $250 million annually to the state’s economy.

Much of this income is generated by the jobs created by research and tourism, as well as operations related purchases such as equipment, materials or profession­al services.

After a period of public comment, “Rosemont saw the light, so to speak,” Falco said, and hired Tucsonbase­d outdoor lighting company Monrad Engineerin­g, which is headed by Christian Monrad, a former president of the Internatio­nal Dark-sky Assn. A new lighting plan was drafted and released in January.

If adopted, the new plan would reduce the total lumen output to a quarter of the original design — down to roughly 5.1million lumens — by applying new lighting technologi­es, such as filtered light-emitting diode systems. An improved fixture design will focus light on the ground instead of spewing it into the sky.

“It’s an improvemen­t,” Falco said. But even with the reduced lumen output, “the mine will still have a significan­t impact on the quality of the sky,” he said.

With even incrementa­l increases in sky brightness, “the faintest stars are the first to go,” Falco said. “But those are the most interestin­g ones.”

Falco worries about not only the light emitted by spotlights, but also the dust kicked up by actual mining activities. “Not just because dust will affect the performanc­e

Even with reduced lighting, ‘the mine will still have a significan­t impact on the quality of the sky.’

— Emilio Falco,

Fred Lawrence Whipple

Observator­y

of the telescopes,” he said, “but also because dust re-directs light into the sky.”

“The project as a whole will undoubtedl­y have some effects upon the surroundin­g ecosystem, as would any new developmen­t in any nonurban locale,” Kathy Arnold, vice president of environmen­tal and regulatory affairs for Rosemont Cooper, said in an email.

But, Arnold said, the new lighting plan “reduces significan­t amounts of the negative environmen­tal or astronomic­al effects due to light at night that may have otherwise occurred” with a convention­al lighting system.

The revised lighting plan hasn’t swayed many environmen­talists opposed to the mine. “My work is a direct expression of the beauty and integrity of this amazing landscape here,” said Matilda Essig, a visual artist who has lived in the nearby town of Sonoita for the last seven years. She says many tourists who come seeking the dark skies end up in her studio buying art.

“The mine stands to have a hugely negative impact on my economic well-being,” she said.

A2009 report by Arizona State University estimated that during the projected 20-year life of the mine, it would generate $907 million annually in associated economic activity for the state and support an average of 2,900 jobs for Arizona workers.

According to an Arizona statute, mining operations like Rosemont aren’t legally required to conform to county lighting ordinances. Enacted in 1972, Pima County’s light pollution laws are some of the most stringent in the country, and have been successful at reining in the glow of a growing Tucson.

In 2010, a study by the Lowell Observator­y found that the sky brightness at nearby Kitt Peak had stayed “remarkably constant” over the last 20 years.

The project’s fate is now in the hands of the U.S. Forest Service, which must rule on the overall mining plan, as well as what lighting would be acceptable.

 ?? Chris Richards
Chicago Tribune ?? OBSERVATOR­IES like this one at Mt. Graham in the Pinaleno Mountains northeast of Tucson prize the southeaste­rn Arizona darkness.
Chris Richards Chicago Tribune OBSERVATOR­IES like this one at Mt. Graham in the Pinaleno Mountains northeast of Tucson prize the southeaste­rn Arizona darkness.
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