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January 17, 2003
Teck Cominco sued for $88
million in Alaskan ecological mess
Will Polaris face similar
environmental concerns?
PATRICIA
DSOUZA
The owner of the Polaris
lead and zinc mine north of Resolute Bay is being sued for a host of environmental
violations at its Red Dog lead and zinc mine in northern Alaska.
The Inupiat village of
Kivalina (population 377) launched the lawsuit in July 2002, alleging Teck Cominco
Ltd. has almost continuously violated the conditions of its permit under the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (the regulatory equivalent of the Nunavut
Water Board) since it was issued in 1998.
If the lawsuit is successful,
the Vancouver-based company could be asked to pay up to US$88 million in fines,
US$27,500 for each of the 3,200 violations.
"The mine regularly
exceeds permit limits for discharges of cyanide into Red Dog Creek, which flows
into the Wulik River, the primary source of drinking water for Kivalina,"
the Kivalina Relocation Planning Committe said in a press release.
The discharge has affected
the taste of the water and leaves a dirty chalk residue on pots and pans, said
Kivalina resident Enoch Adams. In addition, fishermen have noticed deformities
in the dollie varden trout that is a staple for the community.
"One young man saw
a fish swimming toward him," Adams recalls. "He noticed that from
halfway to the tail it was bare bone and it was swimming. Thats
what really startled him that it should have been dead, but it was swimming."
Teck Cominco admits it
has exceeded the discharge allowed by its permit, but adds that a "compliance
order by consent," as special deal struck with the EPA, gives it permission
to do so.
Doug Horswill, senior vice-president
of environment and corporate affairs for Teck Cominco, said the chalky water
could be caused by problems with the communitys water treatment system
or a natural sulphur deposit upstream.
"We dont think
it has to do with the mine," he said.
In fact, Horswill said,
Red Dog Creek is actually cleaner now than it was before mining began in 1989.
In its natural state, the river was running virtually red as a result of mineralization
and oxidization. That created conditions so acidic that fish couldnt live
there.
No Red Dog at Polaris?
The lawsuit, which heads
to court for pre-trial motions next year, is of particular interest to Nunavummiut
as Polaris mine enters the reclamation phase.
Representatives for the
company and the Government of Nunavut are using the project as an example of
successful mining in the territory.
"Id like to
have Polaris be the poster project for temporary use of the land," said
Gordon MacKay, director of minerals, oil and gas for the department of sustainable
development.
But the fly-in, fly-out
operation on the otherwise uninhabited Little Cornwallis Island contributed
little to the people of Nunavut besides taxes paid to Ottawa. It will almost
certainly employ more Inuit in its brief clean-up phase than it did in its 20
years of operation.
And despite the roughly
20 million tonnes of mining discharge that have been dumped into the islands
Garrow Lake, company officials say theyre certain Polaris wont become
another Red Dog.
For one thing, the lake
doesnt open onto any other body of water. For another, not much can live
in its dense, salty bottom layer where the tailings have been deposited.
"Garrow Lake would
not sustain much life in the first place," said Horswill. "Whatever
life it could sustain originally, it can sustain now."
However, a thriving population
of sculpin and clams live on the shores on the lake, in the brakish waters of
its top layer, and its unclear how the lead, zinc and iron concentrates
in the tailings will affect them.
Teck Cominco has committed
to a sculpin study this summer at the request of the department of fisheries
and oceans. But if the study were to show any adverse effects like the
boney fish Adams spoke of in Alaska the company doesnt know what
it would do.
"I cant say
what our plans would be. Further study would be required," said Walter
Kuit, director of environmental affairs for Teck Cominco.
The company also has no
plans to test the birds and bears that prey on the Garrow Lake sculpins.
Reclamation began shortly
after the mine ceased operation this past August. The work is expected to be
completed by the spring of 2004, with additional monitoring extending until
2011.
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