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January 17, 2003
Bathurst road and port
on shaky ground, watchdog says
Huge Izok Lake project
dropped from plan
JIM
BELL
An Arctic environmental
watchdog group says the Bathurst Inlet Road and Port Project may have no reason
to proceed now that the huge Izok Lake lead and zinc property has been dropped
from its backers immediate plans.
Karen Wristen, the executive
director of the Canadian Arctic Resources Committee, this week raised doubts
about whether the project, which overlaps the Bathurst caribou herds calving
grounds, now makes financial sense.
"Why is the government
continuing to throw money at this project?" Wristen said in a news release
issued this week.
The Bathurst Road and Port
Projects original plan would have seen a 290-km all-weather road network
in two sections connecting a sea-port at Bathurst Inlet with the
huge Izok Lake mineral deposit.
The first, and longest,
section would see a 210-km all-weather road stretching from the port to the
eastern shore of Contwoyto Lake.
The second, 80-km, section
would start on the opposite side of Contwoyto Lake, and connect the Lupin Mine
with the as-yet undeveloped Izok Lake property.
The two sections would
be connected by barges running across Contwoyto Lake in the summer, and ice
roads running across the lake in the winter.
The project represents
the realization of a long-sought-after dream that would see the Kitikmeot region
lifted out of poverty and dependency through the opening up of its rich mineral
deposits.
The road-port system would
be built through a 50-50 joint venture between the Kitikmeot Corporation and
Nuna Logistics, a majority-Inuit-owned company thats renowned for its
expertise in ice-road construction and transportation.
But project proponents
have altered the description that was provided to agencies including the Department
of Indian and Northern Affairs, the Kitikmeot Inuit Association and the Nunavut
Water Board.
Theyve changed it
to include only the first phase the 210-km stretch that runs from the
port at Bathurst Inlet to the shore of the lake.
That would eliminate the
Izok Lake project, owned by the Vancouver-based Inmet Mining Corporation. In
1992, Izok Lakes previous owner, the Metall Mining Corporation, lobbied
vigorously for a Kitikmeot road and port, and then cancelled the project after
governments refused to pay for a transportation system.
Since then, the huge but
undeveloped lead-zinc deposit sitting under and around Izok Lake has been considered
to be the projects anchor tenant its reason for being.
But Tony Keen, project
manager for the scheme, said Inmet has informed his group that world zinc prices
are too low for Izok Lake to be developed right now.
Because of that, Keen said,
the second phase of the Bathurst road-port system will be postponed until some
time in the future when base metal prices are high enough to make it
worthwhile for Inmet to develop its property.
But Wristen said the loss
of Izok Lake, the projects "centrepiece," means the scheme may
not be viable anymore, and that any environmental review should be postponed
until the plan is clarified and its financial viability proven.
Tony Keen said, however,
that a Bathurst road-port systems main purpose was not to build a transportation
route to Izok Lake, but to create a badly needed piece of infrastructure that
would stimulate economic development throughout the entire Kitikmeot region.
He pointed out that the
port at Bathurst Inlet wouldnt just be a conduit to supply fuel and other
supplies to mining projects in the interior. It would also be used as a base
from which to supply lower-cost fuel products by barge throughout the Kitikmeot
region.
He denied CARCs allegation
that project proponents have "quietly dropped" the Izok Lake project
to avoid public notice.
"We didnt do
it quietly. We notified everybody that needed to be notified," Keen said.
DIAND has already committed
$3 million to help pay for the projects planning costs, while the Nunavut
government and various private companies have kicked in another $3 million.
The most recent cost estimate
for building the system was about $215 million. But Keen says dropping the Lupin-to-Izok
road will likely lower that figure by at least $50 million.
He cautioned, though, that
final cost figures for the revised plan havent been finished yet.
Meanwhile, all the affected
parties are waiting for Indian Affairs Minister Bob Nault to decide what kind
of environmental review the project should get: a relatively limited one conducted
by the Nunavut Impact Review Board, or a full-blown review by a federal environmental
assessment panel.
CARC favours the latter,
while the projects proponents favour the former.
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