Category Archives: Sulfide Mining

US Army Corps Pulls Dangerous Copper Nickel Mining Permit

The DFL Environmental Caucus applauds the U.S. Army Corps decision Tuesday to revoke the 404 wetlands permit for the NorthMet (formerly PolyMet) copper nickel mine project. The Army Corps rightly agreed with the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa that this already-suspended permit would violate the Band’s water quality standards, threatening the tribal community and others downstream.

The type of sulfide-ore mining that NorthMet would conduct is new to Minnesota, but has a long history of environmental destruction in other states. This ruling supports the claim that this new type of mining cannot currently be safely done in a water rich environment – a major reason that our caucus supports a “Prove it first” approach to copper nickel sulfide mining.

This mine and its toxic waste would threaten the St. Louis River watershed and downstream communities including Fond du Lac and the Twin Ports. The destruction of wetlands that the revoked permit would have allowed would be a climate disaster, reducing Minnesota’s capacity to naturally absorb carbon.

Our DFL platform states that Minnesota should: “Recognize, protect and conserve clean water as a shared resource held in public trust for the health, safety and benefit of the public,” and support “Native American tribes’ rights to self-government.” This decision aligns with those values. As DFLers, we cannot accept the sacrifice of our remaining clean water – already threatened by climate change, PFAS, and other pollution – for this unproven project. Nor can we stand for the violation of tribal sovereignty that would occur if this mine harmed Fond du Lac’s resources.

We thank the Fond du Lac Band for their successful stand against this permit. And we thank all the organizations, scientists, and tens of thousands of ordinary Minnesotans who have fought tirelessly on this issue for clean water and environmental justice.

Prove It First at the Capitol April 4th

Please join our allies with Friends of the Boundary Waters for a Lobby Day at the Minnesota State Capitol.  Here is the announcement, details, and RSVP info:

Join the Friends of the Boundary Waters and our allies in the environmental and indigenous communities to rally for clean water at the Capitol.

On April 4th, we are headed to the Minnesota state capitol for a day of action. (And this year we’ll be in-person & indoors!) Join other clean water supporters to stand up for the Boundary Waters and make sure our elected leaders understand the true importance of clean water.

SCHEDULE FOR THE DAY:

  • 10 am: Gather and have breakfast/coffee on us!
  • 10 am – 1 pm: Meet with your legislator and tell them to support Prove-It-First
  • 1:30 – 2:30 pm: Rally in the Rotunda with legislators and fellow supporters.

 

RSVP HERE

 

Minnesota’s environmental laws are outdated and inadequate. Let’s change them! In addition to the Prove It First Bill, Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness has drafted a suite of laws designed to update our laws and allow agencies to better serve Minnesotans and the water and wilderness we’re so famous for. Find out more about legislative action on our website, and find your legislator to set up a meeting.

Thank you for your continued support of protecting Minnesota’s clean water!

Prove it! Prove it FIRST!

The DFL Environmental Caucus’s second legislative forum covered the Prove It First bill, which will assure Minnesota is not harmed by the proposed sulfide mining projects in our water-rich environment. We were joined by Friends of the Boundary Waters and State Sen. Jen McEwen, author of the bill in the Minnesota Senate, for an hour-long forum to discuss the bill and what you can do to help it pass the legislature this session.

Victory for Wild Rice

The years long battle to protect wild rice or “Mahnomen” in the state of Minnesota secured a significant boost this week from the federal government. The Environmental Protection agency (EPA) announced that erroneous laws which attempted to restrict the MPCA from including effluent limits on sulfate levels hindered the MPCA from properly issuing permits under the Clean Water Act. NPDES permits from the MPCA must now consider these impacts on waters that contain wild rice stands. This is an important victory in the herculean effort to protect Minnesota’s wild rice and water quality.

This issue has arisen out of the controversies surrounding the Minnesota mining industry which has been skirting regulations that are in place and attempting to undermine bedrock environmental protections that have been a cornerstone of Minnesota’s permitting process since the early 70s.

What’s the deal with wild rice?

Wild rice is an important staple for indigenous nations and their culture throughout the state. Indigenous groups have been harvesting this crop for thousands of years as the semi aquatic grain grows in abundance along the shallow banks of lakes and rivers. Known as the food that grows on water, wild rice provides food and industry for tribal and nontribal Minnesotan’s willing to put in the work to harvest or farm its verdant resource. Actually, a grass and not a species of rice, wild rice grows in the United States and Canada with a historic stronghold in Minnesota. Its seeds are used in a variety of Minnesota delicacies like wild rice soups, pancakes, salads, and other foods that people in Minnesota and beyond can enjoy. Minnesotans love wild rice so much that it was made the official state grain in 1977. But this intrinsic resource has been under a relentless siege.

Though popular and abundant, wild rice has faced a number of challenges in the past few years. The impacts of climate change, invasive species, and heavy metals pollution from industrial mining projects over the past century have left wild rice beds shadows of their historic record. Stands of wild rice are particularly vulnerable to excessive levels of sulfate compounds leaching into the sediments where its seeds germinate and grow. Minnesota’s Sulfate Standard which was adopted in 1973 to regulate sulfate discharges from industrial projects limits sulfate to 10 MG/L. That standard has been under fire for over a decade by mining lobbyists and even the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA).

Several legislative attempts to rollback, limit, and outright eliminate water quality standards regarding sulfates have been attempted since 2010. The main goal of these aggressive actions by industries responsible for the discharge of excess sulfates into surrounding aquifers was to recklessly kick open the door for foreign copper nickel sulfide mining conglomerates with globally recognized environmental and labor rights abuses. Essentially, agencies like the DNR and MPCA were complicit in and actively promoted a broken regulatory process. These agencies were also covering up the abuses of the taconite industry which had been operating virtually without Minnesota DNR and MPCA oversight and with indignant impunity towards the very ecosystems and downstream communities they had been harming for decades.

It may have taken seven years of litigation and activism but the EPA has essentially told the MPCA to do its respective duty and to follow the law. With this most recent ruling by the EPA, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency must return to the regulatory table to properly be the stewards of wild rice in Minnesota. The victory in this case cannot be understated. Protecting one of Minnesota’s iconic treasures and natural wonders for so many is critical for a sustainable future. The MPCA must enforce the Minnesota Sulfate Standard to preserve wild rice for future generations to enjoy.

Protect Minnesota’s Waters from Copper Sulfide Mining

There are two things you can do right now to help protect some of Minnesota’s waters from copper sulfide mining.

1- Update Minnesota’s Laws to Protect our Waters from the Dangers of Sulfide Mining

A change to these laws could ban sulfide mining in the Rainy River Headwaters. A 30-day public comment period is open until December 8, 2021! Tell the DNR that our laws do not adequately protect our waters. 

Comment directly to the DNR.   Here is suggested text for a comment.

Department of Natural Resources,

The current restrictions on nonferrous mining in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness (BWCAW) are not adequate to protect the BWCAW from pollution, impairment, or destruction. I strongly urge your department to extend further restrictions on mining to all of the Rainy River Headwaters.

The risks from non-ferrous mining are vastly different from the traditional iron mining in Minnesota. Non-ferrous mining is the process of extracting trace amounts of copper, nickel and other metals from sulfide-bearing ores. This process produces sulfuric acid, which is the same as battery acid. In addition to acidifying lakes and rivers, sulfuric acid leaches out heavy metals such as mercury, lead, arsenic, and other toxins from the rock to produce acid mine drainage (AMD). Sulfate discharge to very freshwaters, such as those found in northern Minnesota, also unleashes a cascade of damaging ecosystem effects. This type of mining is so problematic that there has never been a sulfide mine anywhere in the world that did not contaminate surrounding water sources. The extreme threat to the Wilderness from this type of mining was confirmed by a 2016 U.S. Forest Service (USFS) study that found that the risks associated with the proposed Twin Metals mine were so great that USFS denied the project’s permit application based on the best available scientific evidence.

Additionally, as water does not follow lines on a map set by humans, these restrictions on mining must be extended to the entire Rainy River watershed. What happens upstream, happens downstream and the risk of catastrophic pollution failure or chemical leaching from a nonferrous mine upstream of the BWCAW, like the proposed Twin Metals Mine, is far too great to be allowed on the edge of the pristine natural resources of the BWCAW. The environmental danger posed by non-ferrous mining in the Rainy River watershed is even more acute because it exposes the singularly beautiful and pristine, but very fragile, BWCAW and adjacent areas to the threat of irreversible environmental harm caused by AMD and sulfate pollution.

The federal and state government’s intent to protect the BWCAW for its unique wilderness characteristics was the essential motivation behind the protections the BWCAW currently receives as a federal Wilderness Area. To ensure the Wilderness remains free from pollution as originally intended, the watersheds that flow through the BWCAW must also remain free from pollution. Protection must be extended to the Rainy River Headwaters watershed by prohibiting non-ferrous metallic mineral mining in these areas.

2- Support a 20-year Federal Moratorium on Sulfide Mining near the Boundary Waters

The Biden Administration recently announced that the US Forest Service submitted a mineral withdrawal application to the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) which would provide for a 20-year moratorium on copper-sulfide mining on 225,000 acres of federal land in the Rainy River Watershed. The 2-year environmental study began immediately with the announcement, and a 90-day comment period is underway until January 18, 2020!

You can comment through Friends of the Boundary Waters website, or submit your own unique comments to the BLM

 

To learn more about the Tamarack mine, a newly emerging issue of concern, click here.