Reaction to House Passage of Great Lakes Compact

By The Associated Press
1:42 PM CDT, September 23, 2008

Reaction to the House’s passage Tuesday of the Great Lakes compact, which was designed to prevent the diversion of water from the Great Lakes.

“There is no question that we’re in a much stronger position to protect the Great Lakes with the Compact than without it.” — Rep. Sander Levin, D-Royal Oak.

“It was imperative that Congress quickly act on this bill so that the Great Lakes states will be able to ensure the lakes are used in a sustainable manner.” — Rep. Vernon Ehlers, R-Grand Rapids.

“I do not know how any member in good conscience could vote to approve legislation that may unintentionally open the Great Lakes water to diversions.” Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Menominee.

“The Compact puts the water saved by the collective actions of conscientious Great Lakes residents into millions of bottles and ships them out of the Great Lakes basin.” — Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio.

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Rio Tinto May be Broken Up in Two Years

SEOUL: Rio Tinto Group, battling a hostile US$115bil takeover bid from BHP Billiton Ltd, will probably be broken up within two years by a group, including Chinese investors, BlackRock Inc said.

“It probably won’t all go to BHP,” Richard Davis, who oversees US$30bil in global commodity equities at BlackRock’s London unit, told reporters yesterday in Seoul.

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Auction Items Needed

Dear friends,

Last year, our fundraiser auction was a wonderful success, so we’ve been putting together the 2nd annual event which will be held Saturday, November 8th at UpFront & Co. We are planning to have a great time this year with more silent auction items available within the following categories:

Home and Garden                    -Items or gift certificates
Books, CD’s and DVD’s         -Items only
Food and Entertainment            -Gift certificates and tickets
Adventure and Sport                -Items and certificates
Gift Ideas                                 -Items only

We are accepting donations in all categories and those we haven’t thought of yet!

‘LIVE’ auction ideas include local artwork, furniture, UP Destinations and Experiences and any item over a $100 value. This live auction will be held to 25-30 items.

Call the SWUP office, 228-4444 if you have an item or certificate to donate, and mark your calendar for an evening of fun(raising) and celebration.   If your schedule is pulling you in anther direction, check our website for an easy and secure way to give to Save the Wild UP online.

Thank you for your continued support of an important issue and a hard working organization, and hope to see you at the auction!

Kristi Mills

Director, Save the Wild UP

Click here for more information about the upcoming auction

Save the Date: Fundraiser Auction November 8

From all of us here at SWUP, a hearty, Thank You for participating in our fundraiser auction! Over $6000 was raised through ticket sales and auction bids. For those of you who could not attend last Saturday, your 2008 tax deductible donation is appreciated. Send correspondence to PO Box 562 Marquette, MI 49855. Thanks!

Save the Wild UP will hold its Annual Fundraiser Auction on Saturday, November 8 at the UpFront & Co. in downtown Marquette.

The silent auction will feature a wide variety of items for home and garden, food and entertainment, unique UP experiences as well as great gift ideas. The live auction will feature unique local art and destination adventures from across the UP. Live music and dancing will be provided by The Feltliners, a local string band that can really swing! Sample exceptional wines from around the globe at the wine tasting table, indulge in sweet treats in the ‘Chocolate Forever’ corner or enjoy a relaxing foot rub by a trained professional. Don’t miss this unique opportunity to spend an evening with your friends, and make new acquaintances while holiday shopping for a good cause.

For more information call the SWUP office at 228-4444

DEQ Funding Shortfall Could Hurt Michigan

DEQ Funding Shortfall

Friday, September 12, 2008

By Jeff Alexander

A cash-strapped Michigan Department of Environmental Quality is making unprecedented cuts in programs designed to protect the state’s surface waters and wetlands from environmental abuse.

MDEQ Director Steven Chester said several years of budget cuts, in the face of rising inflation and other expenses, have left the department unable to fully do its job.

“We simply don’t have the kind of funding we need to adequately implement the laws we’re required to implement,” Chester told local officials Thursday at a water quality preservation workshop.

The DEQ has dropped on-site inspections of wetlands that developers and others want to fill with dirt or otherwise alter. Agency officials are reviewing those proposals from their desks, relying on photographs submitted by permit applicants.

“Historically, we’ve always done a site visit for wetlands permits,” Chester said. “We will no longer be doing that — we’ll be doing a desk review.”

The DEQ also is slashing its pollution spill response program and will ignore “minor complaints” about individuals or businesses illegally filling in wetlands. Chester said the DEQ will defer to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on wetland alteration permits sought for sites along the Great Lakes and connecting waters.

The agency also will issue surface water discharge permits, which allow companies to pump limited amounts of pollutants into lakes and streams, to “minor facilities” without first conducting an on-site inspection.

“The bottom line is we simply don’t have the resources to get out and inspect all of these facilities … in some cases, we’ll have to rely on people’s honesty and integrity,” Chester said.

Environmental advocate Tanya Cabala said the cuts will jeopardize Michigan’s environment. She said areas like West Michigan, where surface waters and wetlands are abundant, will suffer more than drier areas of the state.

“There’s no question there will be an impact to the environment,” Cabala said. “It may not be readily apparent in the short term, but one of the things that concerns me is that this will create a climate that leads to more violations” of environmental laws.

Chester’s comments were a prelude to his pitch for increased funding of the DEQ and an environmental cleanup bond the agency hopes to put before voters in November 2010.

The DEQ’s retreat on environmental protection programs is one of many symptoms of the state’s prolonged fiscal crisis. Chester said the DEQ’s general fund budget has been cut by 60 percent over the past six years; the agency has recouped some of those losses by charging companies more for permits to alter wetlands or discharge pollutants to the air and water.

DEQ officials had hoped to put a $1.3 billion environmental bond — the funds from which would clean up hundreds of pollution sites and bolster Great Lakes restoration efforts — on this November’s ballot.

Chester said there wasn’t enough support in the Legislature to put the environmental bond before voters this year. He said the department hopes to get the initiative on the November 2010 ballot.

The $675 million from the Clean Michigan Initiative that voters approved in 1998 is almost gone. Chester said there is enough bond money left to continue cleanups at 100 sites — work will soon be suspended or halted soon at about 70 other sites.

There is no money in the DEQ budget, Chester said, to begin cleanups at about 3,000 other known pollution sites.

Large Rio Tinto Shareholder Divests on Ethical Grounds

Large Rio Tinto Shareholder Divests on Ethical Grounds

September 10, 2008

Gabriel Caplett

The Norwegian government recently sold its $890 million stake in mining giant Rio Tinto, based on the company’s “grossly unethical conduct” at its Grasberg Mine, in Papua New Guinea. Norway’s Ministry of Finance made the decision after realizing that continued investment in Rio Tinto would “contribute to severe environmental damage.”

Norway’s $375 billion Government Pension Fund-Global invests the country’s oil and gas revenues in foreign stocks and bonds. The Fund was one of Rio Tinto’s largest shareholders and is Europe’s largest equity investor, holding roughly 1 % of all European-listed shares. Norway’s Council on Ethics offers recommendations to the Ministry of Finance regarding the Fund’s holdings.

According to Kristin Halvorsen, Minister of Finance, “Exclusion of a company from the Fund reflects our unwillingness to run an unacceptable risk of contributing to grossly unethical conduct. The Council on Ethics has concluded that Rio Tinto is directly involved, through its participation in the Grasberg mine in Indonesia, in the severe environmental damage caused by that mining operation. There are no indications to the effect that the company’s practises will be changed in future. The Fund cannot hold ownership interests in such a company.”

Since 1996, Rio Tinto has held a 40% stake in the largely open-pit Grasberg Mine and has contributed roughly $1 billion in capital investments. The mine, which borders Lorentz National Park, a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) heritage site, is considered to be profitable until 2041. Daily, the company dumps at least 230,000 tons of tailings waste into the local river system that contains high amounts of heavy metals, such as copper, lead and zinc, as well as toxic levels of selenium, arsenic and cyanide.

The Council on Ethics maintains the company is “taking advantage of the low environmental standards and the lenient law enforcement in the country where it operates” and that its system of tailings disposal has “led to the destruction of most aquatic life in the waters affected by the discharge.” The Council reports that tailings disposal will increase with future mine expansions and that “there are no indications to the effect that these practices will be changed in future, or that measures will be taken to significantly reduce the damage to the environment.”

In response to a September 9, 2008 Ministry of Finance press release, Rio Tinto Copper CEO, Bret Clayton, said, “We believe we have an excellent safety and environmental record and that this is an unfounded position and that we are an industry leader for many years in this area.”

Rio Tinto spokesman, Nick Cobban, maintained that the company has “an exemplary record in environmental matters, world-leading in fact, and they are given the very highest priority in everything we do.”

Regarding tailings and acid mine drainage contamination, the Council on Ethics reported that, “riverine tailings disposal is undoubtedly the major environmental problem associated with the mining operation today as the daily disposal of 230,000 tons of tailings generates severe and long-term environmental damage. Furthermore, the Council deems it probable that acid rock drainage from the stockpiles will constitute an increasing and considerable environmental problem with potentially far-reaching harmful effects in the future. Consequently, the Council takes as its point of departure that the damage is severe and that there is an unacceptable risk that the environmental impact caused by the mining operation is lasting and irreversible.”

In a response to the Council on Ethic’s December 4, 2007 letter of inquiry Rio Tinto insisted that it “maintains the highest environmental standards at all its operations wherever they are located.”

According to the Council, Rio Tinto did “not address” the mine’s extensive acid rock drainage (commonly-known as “acid mine drainage”) which is “considered one of the most serious mining-related environmental problems across the world.” The Council’s report noted that, “Acid rock drainage from the deposit sites was first observed in 1993, and leaching into the groundwaters has also been reported, causing the pollution of springs in the Lorentz National Park, among others.”

According to Partizans (People Against Rio Tinto And It’s Subsidiaries) founder, Roger Moody, “Rio Tinto has excused its participation in this unacceptable project for thirteen years claiming that, because it doesn’t actually manage the mine, therefore it’s not responsible for its impacts.  In fact, Rio Tinto’s financing proved crucial to the massive expansion of this mine a decade ago, and the company has been directly complicit in creating the unmitigated disaster it is today. The Norwegian government has recognized this. Hopefully other investors will quickly do so too. Just about every major bank, and many pension funds, also have shares in Rio Tinto.”

At Rio Tinto’s April 17, 2008 Annual General Meeting (AGM), several shareholders discussed the extensive environmental and economic devastation that has occurred due to the Grasberg Mine, as well as human rights violations of rape, torture, murder and arbitrary detention linked to the company’s cooperation with the repressive Indonesian military. The Australian Council on Overseas Aid found mine security and military personnel were responsible for the disappearance of 22 civilians between 1994 and 1995. The company has acknowledged that it paid the military $4.7 million in 2001 and $5.6 million in 2002 for its services.

Benny Wenda, an independence leader from West Papua, and founder of the Free West Papua Campaign, spoke at the AGM, raising concerns over the continued Indonesia occupation of West Papua and military control over freedom of speech.  Wenda was “arrested, tortured and threatened with death” for peacefully protesting the Rio Tinto/Freeport McMoRan Grasberg gold and copper mine. He escaped from prison and resides, as an exile, in the UK.

Rio Tinto is the parent company of Kennecott Minerals, which is seeking to open a metallic sulfide mine on the Yellow Dog Plains, southwest of Big Bay, Michigan. According to the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Kennecott is the second largest toxic polluter in the US. The company maintains that, at its Eagle Project, it is “promoting harmony and preserving balance between people and nature.”

State approval of the mine project is currenty in contested case, in Lansing. The Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) has admitted, in sworn testimony, that the mine does not meet legal standards to protect the environment and that Kennecott has no contingency plan for a mine collapse or tailings leaks. The DEQ approved Kennecott’s mine, groundwater and air quality permits on December 14, 2007. A final decision regarding the contested case is expected by January, 2009.

The DEQ recently admitted that Kennecott must legally apply for permit amendments for its plans to supply electric power to the mine site and construct a haul road. A surface use lease permit from the Michigan Department of Natural Resources (DNR) has yet to be finalized and a circuit court case regarding the decision has not yet begun. Additionally, the EPA has sent a letter of deficiency to the company regarding Kennecott’s application for an Underground Injection permit. The EPA requested further information and clarification on incorrect information in Kennecott’s mine plan, such as the correct direction of groundwater flow at the site.

Two and a half years after submitting its application, Kennecott still lacks any legally-complete state or federal approvals to open and operate its proposed mine.

click here to read the report

Green Investment Will Yield Two Million New Jobs in Two Years

Washington, D.C. (September 9, 2008) — As America confronts the current energy crisis, a new report released today by the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and partner labor and environmental groups shows that the U.S. can create two million jobs by investing in clean energy technologies that will strengthen the economy and fight global warming. The report finds that investing in clean energy would create four times as many jobs as spending the same amount of money within the oil industry.

“This new report shows that investing in clean energy is a win-win solution. Shifting to clean energy will put more people to work, provide consumers relief at the pump, help reduce global warming pollution and revitalize our economy at a time when many Americans are hurting,” said Frances Beinecke, President of NRDC.
“Green Recovery – A Program to Create Good Jobs and Start Building a Low-Carbon Economy” analyzes the potential for a two year $100 billion green investment program – which would be comparable to the size of the April 2008 federal stimulus package dedicated to consumer rebates – to be an engine for job creation in the U.S. This type of investment is a component of a broader clean energy strategy to create a low-carbon economy and reduce global warming pollutions.
The program could be paid for with proceeds from auctions of carbon permits under a global warming cap-and-trade program that will drive private investments into clean energy and raise public revenue through carbon permit auctions. A cap-and-trade program will enable America to reduce global warming pollution to the levels science indicates are needed to avoid the worst effects of global warming.
The package is illustrative of the potential for clean energy – and specifically green infrastructure investments – to create new jobs and strengthen the economy. The specific package would invest in six green infrastructure priorities: retrofitting buildings to improve energy efficiency, expanding mass transit and freight rail, constructing “smart” electrical grid transmission systems, wind power, solar power, and next-generation biofuels.
The report also shows that the vast majority of the two million jobs gained from this initial $100 billion investment in clean energy would be in the same areas of employment that people already work in today, in every region and state of the country; for example: constructing wind farms creates jobs for sheet metal workers, machinists and truck drivers, among many others. Increasing the energy efficiency of buildings through retrofitting requires roofers, insulators and building inspectors. Expanding mass transit systems employs civil engineers, electricians, and dispatchers.
In addition to creating two million jobs nationwide over two years, a $100 billion initial investment in our clean energy future would:
  • Create nearly four times more jobs than spending the same amount of money within the oil industry and 300,000 more jobs than a similar amount of spending directed toward household consumption.
  • Create roughly triple the number of good jobs — paying at least $16 dollars an hour — as spending the same amount of money within the oil industry.
  • Bolster employment especially in construction and manufacturing. Construction employment has fallen from 8 million to 7.2 million over the past two years due to the housing bubble collapse. The Green Recovery program can, at the least, bring back these lost 800,000 construction jobs.
The report proposes that the $100 billion of initial investments fund:
  • $50 billion for tax credits. This would assist private businesses and homeowners to finance both commercial and residential building retrofits, as well as investments in renewable-energy systems.
  • $46 billion in direct government spending. This would support public building retrofits, the expansion of mass transit, freight rail and smart electrical-grid systems, and new investments in renewable energy.
  • $4 billion for federal loan guarantees. This would underwrite private credit that is extended to finance building retrofits and investments in renewable energy.
The report was written by the Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, under commission by the Center for American Progress (CAP) and released by NRDC and a coalition of labor and environmental groups. The authors of the report are Robert Pollin, Heidi Garrett-Peltier, James Heintz, and Helen Scharber of PERI. For the complete report findings go to