Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alaskans Fear Environmental, Industrial Threats From Mines In Northwest B.C.

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 02 Dec, 2014 04:28 PM
  • Alaskans Fear Environmental, Industrial Threats From Mines In Northwest B.C.
VICTORIA — British Columbia's ambition of opening new mines in the province's north has raised fears in neighbouring Alaska where environmental and aboriginal groups say the industry's unchecked development threatens their salmon and tourism industries.
 
Tribal leaders and salmon-protection advocates gathered at a Bureau of Indian Affairs conference in Anchorage Tuesday, and high on the agenda was the impact of B.C. mineral developments on the multibillion-dollar Alaskan industries.
 
Conference delegates called on the U.S. State Department to use the 1909 Boundary Waters Treaty to activate the International Joint Commission, hold boundary dispute hearings and discuss the important salmon waterways, the communities they support and the risks they face from potential mine contamination.
 
"We're asking the U.S. federal government to elevate this issue to the International Joint Commission," said Guy Archibald, a spokesman for the southeast Alaska Conservation Council.
 
Archibald said conservation and aboriginal groups have formed the Salmon Beyond Borders coalition to lobby their government to pressure Canada and B.C.
 
He said both Canada and the U.S. must formally request the International Joint Commission hearings.
 
"We see this region for its salmon and cultural benefits, and it seems like northwest B.C., in the same region, looks more towards mineral development as being the best use of the land, so we see there's kind of a conflict going on here," said Archibald in an interview just prior to his convention address.
 
The Alaskans say rapid, industrial mine developments in B.C. threaten the headwaters of some of southeast Alaska's prime salmon rivers, including the Taku, Stikine and Unuk rivers, which flow through Canada's most-western province.
 
The Alaskans say the rivers are some of the most productive salmon rivers on the entire North American west coast, and have ecological, cultural and recreational uses and values.
 
Archibald said the Alaskans are deeply concerned about what they consider loose mining regulations in B.C., especially since last summer's tailings pond breach at the Mount Polley mine near Williams Lake, in B.C.'s central Interior.
 
Millions of litres of mine water and waste gushed over the landscape near Likely, B.C., last August and shut down operations at the Imperial Metals open pit, copper and gold mine.
 
Archibald said a visit to Alaska last month by B.C.'s Energy and Mines Minister Bill Bennett did not alleviate concerns about potential, future disasters in B.C.'s northwest.
 
"He was trying to tamp down some of the bad press over the Mount Polley tailings disaster," said Archibald.
 
"He basically equated what happened at Imperial Metals Mount Polley mine to a large avalanche. That's the kind of rhetoric that really worries people in southeast Alaska."
 
Bennett was not immediately available for comment.
 
Bennett travelled to Alaska, spoke to the annual Alaska Miners Association convention in Anchorage and met with state officials and fishing organizations.
 
Bennett said he was accompanied by Chad Day, president of the Tahltan Central Council, along with senior government environment and energy officials.
 
The Tahltan of northwest B.C. have explored mining developments with the province.
 
Bennett said he also met with Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, a Republican who has expressed concerns about B.C.'s mining industry.

MORE National ARTICLES

Attorney General Sues Truck Driver In Crash That Killed Working Mountie

Attorney General Sues Truck Driver In Crash That Killed Working Mountie
VANCOUVER — Canada's attorney general is suing a transport truck driver involved in a crash that killed a Surrey, B.C. Mountie who was working in the line of the duty.

Attorney General Sues Truck Driver In Crash That Killed Working Mountie

Ceremony Honours WWII Airmen Whose Bodies Found Decades After Takeoff In B.C.

Ceremony Honours WWII Airmen Whose Bodies Found Decades After Takeoff In B.C.
VICTORIA — Four lost airmen have finally been laid to rest — 72 years after they disappeared while on a Second World War training mission on Vancouver Island.

Ceremony Honours WWII Airmen Whose Bodies Found Decades After Takeoff In B.C.

No Sign Of Two Viruses In Some B.C. Salmon: Canadian Food Inspection Agency

No Sign Of Two Viruses In Some B.C. Salmon: Canadian Food Inspection Agency
VANCOUVER — Two viruses that can be fatal to some B.C. salmon species have failed to turn up in tests conducted by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

No Sign Of Two Viruses In Some B.C. Salmon: Canadian Food Inspection Agency

RCMP Announce Charges In Two Separate Cold-case Murders In Surrey

RCMP Announce Charges In Two Separate Cold-case Murders In Surrey
Homicide investigators in the Vancouver area have announced arrests in two separate cold cases. Both involve murders in Surrey, B.C. — the first in 2006 and the second in 2009.

RCMP Announce Charges In Two Separate Cold-case Murders In Surrey

Man Charged With Murder Of Woman In Vancouver Home Makes Court Appearance

Man Charged With Murder Of Woman In Vancouver Home Makes Court Appearance
SURREY, B.C. — A 28-year-old man accused of killing a woman in a Vancouver home has made his first court appearance.

Man Charged With Murder Of Woman In Vancouver Home Makes Court Appearance

Ceremony Honours 4 Airmen Whose Bodies Found Decades After Takeoff Near Victoria

Ceremony Honours 4 Airmen Whose Bodies Found Decades After Takeoff Near Victoria
VICTORIA — Four airmen have been laid to rest at a military service in Victoria — more than 70 years after they disappeared in their aircraft.

Ceremony Honours 4 Airmen Whose Bodies Found Decades After Takeoff Near Victoria