The Pending Pebble Mine Disaster Hits LA Times Radar
By Tom Chandler on Sep 1, 2007 in Environment, News
Some call it the Pebble Mine project. I’m calling it the Pending Pebble Mine Disaster.
It’s the massive mine proposal that threatens the whole ecosystem of Bristol Bay with a cyanide leach mine, the toxic byproducts of which could contaminate one of the richest commercial fisheries on the planet — worth at least $450 million annually.
The LA Times ran a significant story on the project:
But if fish have made the region’s past and present fortune, the future sparkles with the promise of precious metal. Beneath the rolling tundra, straddling the headwaters of two of the watershed’s most productive rivers, a Canadian company has discovered North America’s biggest deposits of gold and copper, worth about $300 billion in today’s soaring commodities markets.
The dilemma is whether Alaskans will have to choose between the two — and whether the watershed, its fish and a host of other wildlife will be casualties of what could probably be one of the world’s biggest mines. The project would entail five earthen dams, of which two would be bigger than China’s Three Gorges Dam.
The size of the mines are staggering:
If the full resource were developed, as much as 12 billion tons of earth would be excavated and milled to extract the tiny flecks of metal: about 82 million ounces of gold, 67 billion pounds of copper and 4 billion pounds of molybdenum.
Ten square miles of impoundments would fill two valleys, to store in perpetuity more than 2.5 billion tons of waste rock and toxic residue.
Let’s be clear; these mines aren’t little holes in the ground. It’s real strip mining, where massive amounts of the earth are stripped away, processed with cyanide to remove the ore, and then dumped in valleys, with no hope of reclamation.
The cyanide process leaves tons of toxic waste behind — toxins that haven’t been kept out of the environment in previous mines.
Predictably, the mining company is spreading money around in an attempt to sway opinion (the same tactic Nestle’s using to recruit support up here), and is telling residents the mine and fish can coexist.
Northern Dynasty officials scoff at what they call an alarmist campaign. “We know Bristol Bay is a sensitive area,” said Sean Magee, vice president for public affairs. “But there’ve been tremendous changes in the mining industry in the past 25 years. These projects can be done safely now: Mining and fishing can coexist.”
It’s not as if he has a vested interest in saying that, and naturally, he can’t prove it.
In fact, a local tribal leader was flown in to see similar mining projects in Nevada, and this was his reaction:
Hobson has been a vocal opponent of the mine since the Renewable Resources Coalition flew him and other native leaders to see mines in Nevada. There, he said, they saw landscape that looked like it had been “bombed” — huge pits, contaminated water and depleted aquifers that have forced a local Indian tribe to truck in drinking water.
Once again, somebody wants to take a healthy ecosystem — one that’s feeding millions of people — and turn it into a cesspool. Keep in mind that more than a quarter of the USA’s wild salmon catch comes from Bristol, and that the salmon support a huge food chain.
If they go, most everything else does too.
Technorati Tags: pebble mine, bristol bay, mine, northern dynasty, salmon










Les Cinnamon | Sep 2, 2007 | Reply
Who needs fish? Who needs scenery, who need drinking water. Go for the gold, that is our tradition.
Tom Chandler | Sep 2, 2007 | Reply
One of the tribal leaders opposed to the project said “You can’t eat gold.” True.
By way of contrast, the head of the mining company said that the project was destined to last 50-80 years, and had the potential to “eradicate poverty” in the area “forever.”
His definition of forever lacks a little in the way of long-term vision; a half century of profits (leaving the area and flowing to corporate headquarters) isn’t quite the same as several hundreds (even thousands) of years of toxic leftovers poisoning one of richest sustainable food sources on the planet…
kbarton10 | Sep 3, 2007 | Reply
The Grasberg mine in Papua, New Guinea is the largest such open pit mine in the world. Gold and copper are the primary minerals. Want to see a moonscape in a rainforest?
http://faculty.kutztown.edu/friehauf/indonesia/grasberg.html
Cody | Feb 11, 2008 | Reply
Hey Les! Have you actually ever been to where Northern Dynasty is proposing to build their toxic waste dump of a mine? If so, then you clearly have no no sympathy for the thousands of fishermen and process workers who will be JOBLESS if Northern Dynasty is allowed to build Pebble Mine. As a Bristol Bay fisherman, I have seen the proposed mine site, and I know what will be directly affected if this monstrosity is allowed into being. By the way, have you ever seen what cyanide does to a living body?
Tom Chandler | Feb 11, 2008 | Reply
Cody: Pretty sure Les was being sarcastic. At least I hope so…