Indianz.Com > News > Montana Free Press: Tribes battle pollution from mining operation across the border
Study finds mining-related pollution 350 miles downstream of Canadian coal mines
Regulators in the U.S. say the study shows that dangerous levels of selenium are entering the waterways of Montana and Idaho.
Tuesday, August 27, 2024
Montana Free Press
Researchers with the U.S. Geological Survey have concluded that a large coal-mining operation in British Columbia is sending pollution more than 350 miles downstream into the Columbia River. The study also found that selenium levels in the Upper Columbia watershed continue to rise in British Columbia, Montana and Idaho, despite Elk Valley Resources’ $1.4 billion investment in technology to remove selenium, a trace element that can hamper fish reproduction and lead to gill, facial and spinal deformities.The study, published in the August 13 edition of Environmental Science and Technology Letters, plotted selenium over a 17-year period and found that increasing levels parallel the expansion of an open-pit coal mining operation in British Columbia’s Elk River Valley. To conduct the study, U.S. Geological Survey hydrologist Madison Foster compared selenium concentrations at five sites downstream of coal mines that are operated by Elk Valley Resources to those reported at a nearby basin with similar geology but no large coal mines.Foster’s analysis found “multiple lines of evidence that [selenium] from the Elk River Mines is transported [357 river miles] and may pose risks to aquatic life in the transboundary Columbia River.”
Study says Canadian coal mines put unparalleled pollution in Montana-bound watersThe commission Jamison referred to is composed of an equal number of Americans and Canadians who investigate water quantity and quality issues associated with waterways that span the U.S.-Canada border. The findings of an IJC investigation underpin the policy changes that the commission recommends to the relevant governments. The IJC, which was established by the Boundary Waters Treaty of 1909, made history last year when it pledged to incorporate the perspectives and concerns of Indigenous governments in its investigation of the Kootenai watershed.Erin Sexton, a researcher with the University of Montana’s Flathead Lake Biological Station, is a consultant to the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, one of six tribal governments involved in the IJC’s referral. Sexton said the IJC is opening an opportunity for public participation in an arena that could use more transparency and greater stakeholder engagement. She said she hopes the increasing scrutiny will drive British Columbia to conclude that Elk Valley Resources is out of compliance with a provision of its decade-old permit directing mine owners to stabilize and decrease pollution entering downstream waterways. An expansion of the five existing mines should be off the table, Sexton added.Elk Valley Resources spokesperson Chris Stannell argued that Foster’s study demonstrates that selenium concentrations “have stabilized in recent years” and highlighted his company’s investments to expand water treatment. The company’s existing plants can treat more than 20 million gallons of water per day, and the company estimates that it will nearly double that capacity by 2027, Stannell said. In late March, the state Board of Environmental Review sided with a Canadian mining company in its assertion that the Department of Environmental Quality broke Montana law when it adopted a strict new standard for selenium pollution entering Lake Koocanusa, which straddles the U.S.-Canada border. DEQ is holding firm to its standard — and that could have repercussions for Teck Coal’s plans to expand its British Columbia coal mining operation. Asked if the company had considered increasing its bonding or establishing a blind trust to cover the costs of future reclamation requirements, Stannell said Elk Valley Resources “meets all current bonding requirements” established by British Columbia regulators and is “committed to meeting all reclamation obligations at no cost to government or taxpayers.”
U.S., Canada and Ktunaxa Nation ink agreement to mitigate waterborne pollutionThe study follows two other major developments, one commercial and one regulatory. In July, Glencore paid nearly $7 billion to acquire Elk Valley Resources, a company former owner Teck had spun off from its other mining operations. One of the world’s largest mining companies, Glencore is a familiar name in northwest Montana. In 1999, the Swiss company acquired an aluminum plant in Columbia Falls, which has been a Superfund site with an uncertain clean-up trajectory for nearly a decade.Right around the time that the Elk Valley Resources sale was finalized, federal regulators in Canada indicted Teck on five counts of contaminating a tributary of the Elk River, which feeds into Lake Koocanusa, with waste rock from its mines. Those charges pertained to an investigation that occurred in 2023. A spokesperson from Environment and Climate Change Canada did not respond to an email from MTFP seeking information on the indictments and comment on the USGS researchers’ findings by press time Monday.Sorting out an enforcement framework with these multi-jurisdictional issues isn’t a struggle unique to Canada. States on this side of the border are also grappling with adopting and effectively enforcing water quality regulations.Although Montana has adopted a selenium standard that scientists deem protecting of aquatic life in Lake Kooanusa, selenium levels routinely exceed established standards, both in the lake and the river that flows from it. As a result, Montana has frequently exceeded the selenium standard Idaho regulators have adopted to protect the portions of the Kootenai River located within its borders.Robert Steed, a surface water manager for the Coeur D’Alene region of the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality, said the Kootenai River has been designated an “impaired” river due to selenium levels, and an excess of selenium has been found in the tissue samples taken from mountain whitefish. Steed said he’s concerned that costly, multi-year efforts to restore beleaguered burbot and white sturgeon populations could be jeopardized by a mining operation hundreds of miles upstream. “To see pollution be the limiting [factor], rather than the habitat that we’re trying to create for burbot, white sturgeon and cutthroat — that’s sad,” he said. Genny Hoyle, an environmental director with the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho, echoed that frustration. In an email to MTFP, Hoyle said the tribe is finding concerning levels of selenium in endangered white sturgeon and burbot, a native gamefish species. “The Kootenai River is at a crucial point,” she said. “Prompt and adequate action is needed to prevent further degradation of the health of the beautiful and diverse Kootenai ecosystem.”The IJC is accepting comments on the Kootenai watershed through August 27 as an initial step in its two-year investigation. Note: This story originally appeared on Montana Free Press. It is published under a Creative Commons license.
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