Saturday, January 18, 2014

New study may prove to be the death knell for the Pebble Mine Project in Alaska. If fish could applaud they would be doing so.

Bristol Bay
Courtesy of the Juneau Empire: 

A government report indicates a large-scale copper and gold mine in Alaska’s Bristol Bay region could have devastating effects on the world’s largest sockeye salmon fishery and adversely affect Alaska Natives, whose culture is built around salmon. 

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Wednesday released its final assessment of the impact of mining in the Bristol Bay region. Its findings are similar to those of an earlier draft report, concluding that, depending on the size of the mine, up to 94 miles of streams would be destroyed in the mere build-out of the project, including losses of between 5 and 22 miles of streams known to provide salmon spawning and rearing habitat. Up to 5,350 acres of wetlands, ponds and lakes also would be lost due to the mine footprint. 

The report concludes that “large-scale mining in the Bristol Bay watershed poses significant near- and long-term risk to salmon, wildlife and Native Alaska cultures,” EPA regional administrator Dennis McLerran said in a conference call with reporters. 

The battle over the proposed Pebble Mine has been waged for years and extended beyond Alaska’s borders, with environmental activists like actor Robert Redford opposing development. Multinational jewelers have said they won’t use minerals mined from the Alaska prospect, and pension fund managers from California and New York City last year asked London-based Rio Tinto, a shareholder of mine owner Northern Dynasty Minerals Ltd., to divest, a request Rio Tinto said it planned to consider. 

This battle over the Pebble Mine has been waging now for over five years, and it may never have even began if Sarah Palin had not interfered in the the early initiative process: 

The two sides spent more than $10 million -- unprecedented for such efforts in Alaska -- and throughout it all, the state's highly popular first-term governor, Sarah Palin, held back. Alaska law forbids state officials from using state resources to advocate on ballot initiatives. 

Then, six days before the Aug. 26 vote, with the race looking close, Palin broke her silence. Asked about the initiative at a news conference, she invoked "personal privilege" to give an opinion. "Let me take my governor's hat off for just a minute here and tell you, personally, Prop. 4 -- I vote no on that," she said. "I have all the confidence in the world that [the Department of Environmental Conservation] and our [Department of Natural Resources] have great, very stringent regulations and policies already in place. We're going to make sure that mines operate only safely, soundly." 

Palin's comments rocked the contest. Within a day, the pro-mining coalition fighting the referendum had placed full-page ads with a picture of the governor and the word "NO." The initiative went down to defeat, with 57 percent of voters rejecting it. 

Three days later, Palin was named Republican Sen. John McCain's running mate, throwing Alaska into a media frenzy. But the fallout has lingered from an episode that may stand as one of the most consequential in Palin's 21-month tenure. The state ethics panel is examining whether her comments violated the law against state advocacy on ballot measures; it had already ruled that a state Web site was improperly slanted toward mining interests.

So one of Palin's last acts before being tapped by McCain was to help start a war up here between the fishermen and the supporters of the Pebble Mine. And people wonder why Alaskans dislike her so much.

Anyhow this new report might be the nail that we have been searching for to finally close the coffin on the Pebble Mine for good.

At least I certainly hope so.

18 comments:

  1. Anonymous3:08 AM

    Well, well, Little Miss Opinion took off her Governors hat and spoke. WTF! Nice she could cross that threshold whenever she wanted and step back and put her dunce cap back on.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:33 AM

      Remember he pimping pebble mine on her show? That restaurant her "friend had" that had a pebble mine sign in the window? Nice.
      Pebble mine will go by way of the "Palin Curse" thankfully....

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:04 PM

      Now we know why she is so unpopular in Dillingham. She holds nothing dear, nothing.

      Delete
  2. Anonymous5:39 AM

    That image is just so gorgeous, I had to go and find a bigger version.

    This story just makes me hate Sarah Palin all the more. She is a cancer on Alaska, and America, and I curse John McCain for his desperation and lack of self control, which resulted in her being given a national voice.

    This is breathtaking:

    https://prod_membership_artifacts.s3.amazonaws.com/background/NationalGeographic_1356091.jpg

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:03 PM

      Thanks for doing the the 'legwork' anon @5:39 AM. It certainly is. I'm using it as my desktop. :)

      Delete
  3. Anonymous6:52 AM

    Wonder if those who picked her for VP had ties to the mine owners or Rio Tinto? Someone check Culvahouse's and Cindy McCain's stock holdings st the time, please.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous8:17 AM

    If Rio Tinti did something that cost them profits, I would be shocked. "Planned to consider" is in no way commitment to divest.

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  5. Part of "maturing" is disillusionment. Fortunately I gain more heroes than I lose, but I lost one in connection with Pebble Mine.

    I worked for two Alaska Native Regional Corporattions for "a while." I was one of the good guys and there were other good guys I respected. One of these was John Shively, VISTA volunteer, Alaska Federation of Natives lobbyist, activist in securing the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, Vice President for the NANA Native Corporation.

    Imagine my shock to find he'd become CEO of Pebble Partnership. Here's what he says on their website:

    "Right now, it’s an idea. An idea that could help power our nation’s green energy initiatives. An idea that could bring jobs and infrastructure to Southwest Alaska, helping families remain in their villages and thrive. An idea that all of this is possible in harmony with the environment." [Accompanied by the obligatory photo of an Alaska Native.]

    What a bunch of horse puckey. Of course, Shively describes the EPA assessment as "flawed." It doesn't and cannot, according to him, address the functioning of a "21st century mine." As if sophisticated analysis and modeling does not exist!

    I'm disappointed when it appears that people will do anything for money . . . .

    In any case, I learned when growing up in Colorado, that the only way to cope with development was to extract as much money up front for the inevitable environmental, cultural and social damage. And that some systems simply CANNOT be interfered with.

    Bristol Bay is one of those systems.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:35 AM

      Its all about greed and power, natives are not immune unfortunately...

      Delete
    2. Very true, 9:35.

      What the photo in the Pebble mine propaganda tries to to is to make Natives and those working "for" Natives think that Pebble Mine is in the interests of most (of the affected) Natives.

      It isn't.

      I'm glad to see Bristol Bay Native Regional Corporation weigh in:

      “From the very beginning, EPA was in Bristol Bay because our federally recognized Tribes and Native organizations, including BBNC, asked them to be. With today’s release, science has weighed-in: Bristol Bay, its existing jobs and way of life could be irreparably damaged by a large-scale mine that is the size and scope of the Pebble project—and therefore, our fish, our people and our cultures must be protected.

      “BBNC supports responsible development where it can be done without causing unacceptable risks to the people, cultures and fishing economy of our region. The proposed Pebble mine is not such a project. It’s time for the agency to initiate a 404(c) action to protect Bristol Bay.”

      Delete
  6. Anonymous8:37 AM

    Ugly fucking old bitch.

    ReplyDelete
  7. hedgewytch9:02 AM

    John Shively is planning on having an informational session on the Pebble Project at the Alaska Forum on the Environment - Anchorage, Denina'a Center Feb 3-7. The session is described as talking about the economic benefits of the project for the region. Be great if a whole bunch of people showed up in opposition to the nonfactual, misinformation he plans on presenting.

    Also the Forum will have a bunch of other sessions, some held by the State, that will discuss water quality, mining and permitting issues, marine debris, climate change, dispersant regulation changes, etc. Many of the talks being given by the State agencies will serve their "public comment" mandate, so its important that people show up to give that opinion. Anyone who is interested in the environmental impacts that are challenging Alaska, this is the conference to attend. www.akforum.org.

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  8. Sally in MI9:40 AM

    So Missy Fishface was all for ruining Bristol Bay for all time? And, gee Sarah, where would all those vibrant young women go to hold fish if you had succeeded? Arizona?
    I, too, think there is more to this...like some uppityups in the RNC had some major money in this venture, and someone gave Sarah the idea to speak up against everything sacred in Alaska.

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    1. Anita Winecooler6:21 PM

      Technically she ruined Two of them, the bay itself, and the bay's reputation by naming Todd's firstborn after it.
      Totally agree, someone high up in the GOP has big time investments in minerals, mineral rights, strip mining, oil, etc.

      Delete
  9. Anonymous11:49 AM

    So in this instance, it was "Kill baby kill!" for Palin...

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anonymous12:00 PM

    Down w/the Pebble Mine project!

    Watch the Alaska government be sneaky in this matter!

    ReplyDelete
  11. Anita Winecooler6:23 PM

    I so hope you're right. Could it be we've found the anti Palin Curse force field?

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous6:24 PM

    The Romans had a similar problem, I believe.

    http://youtu.be/IZxo3lGnT7I?t=42m34s

    ReplyDelete

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