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February 7, 2003
Public hearings begin this
spring on Jericho project
Tiny Tahera takes a
big step in becoming Nunavuts first diamond mine
Diamond-bearing
core samples from the Jericho project.
(FILE PHOTO)
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JIM
BELL
Sometime this spring, residents
of west Kitikmeot will hear detailed information about the Toronto-based Tahera
Corp.s Jericho diamond mine project, and get a chance to ask questions
and have their say about whats likely to become Nunavuts first diamond
mine.
The Nunavut Impact Review
Board, also known as the "NIRB," will run the hearings, which will
look at information provided in an environmental impact statement that Tahera
submitted last week.
"Parties that have
concerns with the document, or have comments or questions, can attend these
public hearings in the affected communities, and the document is either argued
against, or defended by the proponent, depending on the types of questions that
are asked," said Stephanie Briscoe, the review boards executive director.
But before those hearings
are held, the review board, the Nunavut Water Board, and various government
officials will spend at least 60 days reviewing the document.
Once that work is done,
the review board will set the dates for the public hearings. Theyll be
held in Kugluktuk, Cambridge Bay, and Gjoa Haven. Bathurst Inlet residents will
be flown to Cambridge Bay if they wish to attend a hearing, Briscoe said.
April is the earliest possible
time for those hearings, because of the 60-day review requirement.
Another feature of the
process, Briscoe said, is that the review board will hold special traditional
knowledge forums to get valuable information from hunters and older people who
have been using the land for generations.
"There has to be a
technical forum, where the science comes out, but the board is also planning
to hold what were going to call "traditional knowledge" hearings.
Its almost like sitting around the room, talking about the area of interest,
how the area was traditionally used, the local knowledge, basic hunting rights,"
Briscoe said.
All this was set into motion
last week, when Tahera Corp. submitted its environmental impact statement for
the Jericho project.
The impact statement is
a large document that describes the project and assesses how it will affect
the environment. It sets out the companys plans for protecting the environment
while the mine operates, and reclaiming the site after the mine closes.
The Jericho mine would
be a tiny undertaking, dwarfed by the enormous Ekati and Diavik mines on the
other side of the boundary dividing Nunavut and the Northwest Territories.
BHPs Ekati Mine,
for example, is 20 times bigger than Jericho. And Aber Diamond Corp.s
mammoth Diavik mine, which will soon go into full production, cost $1.3 billion
to build. Tahera, on the other hand, will need only $55 million to build Jericho,
which would operate for about eight years.
But if its built,
Jericho would be Nunavuts first new operating mine in many years.
To get there, Tahera must
overcome hurdles: the lengthy regulatory process thats just begun, and
finding the $55 million the company will need to build the mine.
Tahera doesnt have
access to the kind of investment capital thats available to big players
like De Beers and BHP.
Greg Missal, Taheras
environmental manager, said the company would like to strike a strategic alliance
with a diamond processing firm. He said an agreement with a buyer willing to
buy Taheras diamonds would make it much easier for the company to find
investors willing to finance the project.
If Taheras proposal
makes it through the NIRBs round of public hearings this spring, and if
its environmental management plans satisfy regulatory agencies, the company
will get a "project certificate."
That would allow it to
apply for the all the permits and licences the company will need to operate,
including a water licence.
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