• Pebble
mine decision protects state's largest salmon fishery
• Copper
and gold mine stood to affect Manhattan-sized area
theguardian.com,
Peter Moskowitz in New York, Friday 18 July 2014
The Environmental Protection Agency has announced a set of restrictions that will in effect prevent the development of a controversial copper and gold mine in Alaska which many said would have been disastrous for the state’s largest salmon fishery.
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In this 2007 photo, workers with the Pebble Mine project test drill in the Bristol Bay region of Alaska. The mine is now unlikely to proceed. Photograph: Al Grillo/AP |
The Environmental Protection Agency has announced a set of restrictions that will in effect prevent the development of a controversial copper and gold mine in Alaska which many said would have been disastrous for the state’s largest salmon fishery.
Pebble
Mine, located in south-west Alaska near Bristol Bay, would have been one of the
largest opencast mines in the world — more than a mile deep, the depth of the
Grand Canyon. And the total impact of the mine – from the project itself to the
huge waste ponds and piles it would have required – could take up an area the
size of Manhattan, according to the EPA. That, the EPA’s regional
administrator, Dennis McLerran, said on Friday, was unacceptable for the
environment, for those who rely on the salmon in Bristol Bay for work, and for
the Native community who have argued that the area is integral to their way of
life.
“Bristol
Bay is an extraordinary ecosystem that supports an ancient fishing culture and
economic powerhouse,” McLerran said in a statement. “The science is clear that
mining the Pebble deposit would cause irreversible damage to one of the world’s
last intact salmon ecosystems.”
Pebble
Partnership, the company set up by the two mining corporations that sought to
develop the mine, along with the state of Alaska, sued the EPA in May claiming
the agency was overstepping its legal authority by weighing in on the
development.
The EPA’s
decision on Friday could theoretically be affected by that lawsuit, but many
consider the suit a long shot.
Supporters
of the mine, who say the EPA is killing the potential for an economic boom in
the state, saw Friday’s announcement as an all-out attack on states' rights.
“The EPA is
setting a precedent that strips Alaska and all Alaskans of the ability to make
decisions on how to develop a healthy economy on their lands,” Senator Lisa Murkowski said. “This [decision] is a blueprint that will be used across the
country to stop economic development.”
The
agency’s decision does not rule out future development of the mine, but it sets
environmental restrictions so burdensome that moving forward with the project
would probably be financially untenable. While more action from Pebble
Partnership and other supporters of the project is likely, those against the
mine viewed the EPA’s announcement as a decisive win.
“This has
been looming over us for a decade,” said Alannah Hurley, programme manager for
the United Tribes of Bristol Bay, which represents different tribal groups in
the area. “For the tribal community, everything that makes us who we are was at
stake. For the EPA to recognise that Bristol Bay is worth protecting is huge.”
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