Google – AFP, 1 March 2014
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File photo
shows a salmon swimming up a stream in Alaska (USFWS/AFP/File)
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Washington
— US environmental authorities made a rare move Friday to block a massive
copper and gold mine in Alaska before it even gets under way, in a bid to
protect wild salmon.
The Pebble
Mine project has the potential to be one of the biggest open pit copper mines,
but once built, it could threaten the exceptionally rich salmon fishery in the
Bristol Bay area, the Environmental Protection Agency explained in a statement.
"Extensive
scientific study has given us ample reason to believe that the Pebble Mine
would likely have significant and irreversible negative impacts on the Bristol
Bay watershed and its abundant salmon fisheries," said EPA Administrator
Gina McCarthy.
The EPA
action could lead to an unprecedented federal ban on a mining project before
the company behind it even puts in a permit request.
"This
process is not something the agency does very often, but Bristol Bay is an
extraordinary and unique resource," McCarthy said, calling it the
"world's most productive salmon fishery."
Bristol Bay
produces half the wild sockeye salmon in the world, an average of 37.5 million
fish per year, in part because of the exceptional water quality in the streams
and wetlands there.
Plans call
for the mine to be built near the headwaters of two rivers whose fisheries
produce about $480 million of fish and employ some 14,000 people.
In order to
move forward, the mine's promoters would need to show that their activities
wouldn't threaten the ecosystem.
The EPA
move is a victory for environmental activists, fisheries and indigenous groups
who had been fighting the mining project for the past three years.
But
Republican leaders in Alaska, including Governor Sean Parnell and Senator Lisa
Murkowski disapproved, with Murkowski warning the EPA action could set a
"terrible precedent."
Promoters
of the Pebble project say the region holds one of the world's largest and
richest mineral gold and copper deposits, which could produce 36 million tonnes
of copper and more than 3,000 tonnes of gold within the next 30 years.
The EPA
carried out a large-scale study starting three years ago to evaluate the
potential impact of mining on the Bristol Bay ecosystem.
The final
report was completed in January and contains 1.1 million public comments as
well as the analysis of two independent expert panels.

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