San Francisco Chronicle

No permit for controvers­ial mine project

- By Mark Thiessen Mark Thiessen is an Associated Press writer.

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The Trump administra­tion on Wednesday denied a permit for a controvers­ial gold and copper mine near the headwaters of the world’s largest sockeye salmon fishery in southwest Alaska.

The Army Corps of Engineers said in a statement that the permit applicatio­n to build the Pebble Mine was denied under both the Clean Water Act and the Rivers and Harbors Act.

The corps said the discharge plan from the Pebble Limited Partnershi­p, the mine’s backers, doesn’t comply with Clean Water Act guidelines.

The agency “concluded that the proposed project is contrary to the public interest,” according to the statement from Col. Damon Delarosa, commander of the corps’ Alaska district.

Pebble partnershi­p CEO John Shively said he was dismayed, especially after the corps had indicated in an environmen­tal impact statement in July that the mine and fishery could coexist.

“One of the real tragedies of this decision is the loss of economic opportunit­ies for people living in the area,” Shively said in a statement. The environmen­tal review

“clearly describes those benefits, and now a politicall­y driven decision has taken away the hope that many had for a better life. This is also a lost opportunit­y for the state’s future economy.”

The denial comes as somewhat of a surprise.

The Corps of Engineers in July released an environmen­tal review that the mine developer saw as laying the groundwork for key federal approvals. The review said that under normal operations, Pebble Mine, proposed for southwest Alaska’s Bristol Bay region, “would not be expected to have a measurable effect on fish numbers and result in longterm changes to the health of the commercial fisheries in Bristol Bay.”

However, in August, the corps said it had determined that discharges at the mine site would cause “unavoidabl­e adverse impacts to aquatic resources” and laid out required efforts to reduce those effects. That prompted Alaska’s Republican U.S. senators to oppose the project. Sen. Dan Sullivan, who won reelection in November, went so far as to declare the project “dead.”

Canadabase­d Northern Dynasty Minerals Ltd., which owns the Pebble Limited Partnershi­p, said it had submitted a mitigation plan on Nov. 16.

If the project were to have secured approval from the corps, there was still no guarantee it would have been built. It would have needed state approval, and Presidente­lect Joe Biden has expressed opposition to the project.

Last year, the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency withdrew restrictio­ns on developmen­t that were proposed — but never finalized — under the Obama administra­tion and said it planned to work with the corps to address concerns.

 ?? Becky Bohrer / Associated Press 2019 ?? Protesters gathered outside Sen. Lisa Murkowski's office in Juneau, Alaska, last year to protest the proposed Pebble Mine.
Becky Bohrer / Associated Press 2019 Protesters gathered outside Sen. Lisa Murkowski's office in Juneau, Alaska, last year to protest the proposed Pebble Mine.

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