As Mining Surges in Michigan’s North, State Looks at Taking Control

by Jim Malewitz, Staff Writer

05_25_story

A new nickel and copper mine being built at Marquette, Michigan, on the Upper Peninsula, will be a major addition to the state’s mineral extraction industry. (AP)

MARQUETTE, Michigan – It’s a long drive from Marquette to Lansing: more than 400 miles in all, including a five-mile trip across the Straits of Mackinac, divider of Michigan’s peninsulas. So it’s easy to see why local officials here might not feel connected to lawmakers in the state capital. Continue reading

Mining Boom in Great Lakes States Prompts Environmental Concern

by Jim Malewitz, Staff Writer

05_24_story

Beneath the placid waters of the Salmon Trout River on Michigan’s Upper Peninsula lie vast stores of nickel and copper. (Jim Malewitz, Stateline)

BIG BAY, Michigan  – For thousands of years, the Salmon Trout River held fast to a deep secret, as its pristine waters flowed into Lake Superior. Below the river’s headwaters, and hidden underneath 1,000 feet of sand, clay and rock, lie 4.1 million metric tons of ore speckled with valuable metals — primarily nickel and copper — a deposit that’s valued at as much as $5 billion.      Continue reading

Monitoring Needed

May 23, 2012
The Mining Journal

To the Journal editor:

I would like to take this opportunity to thank those of you who helped Cynthia Pryor and I get to London. Whether you helped us out financially or by showing your support in other ways, it was deeply appreciated. It was an honor and privilege to be asked to take our message and concerns to the board and shareholders of Rio Tinto. Continue reading

NWF: Great Lakes Remain Vulnerable to New Wave of Dangerous Mining, According to New Report

Great Lakes Remain Vulnerable to New Wave of Dangerous Mining, According to New Report

Weak laws, lax enforcement undermine efforts to protect natural resources, wildlife, communities from mine waste

05-10-2012 // Jordan Lubetkin
Lake Superior

Gaps, inconsistencies and loopholes in U.S. state and Canadian provincial laws are leaving the Great Lakes and other natural resources vulnerable to a new wave of mining activity sweeping the Upper Great Lakes states of Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota and Canadian province of Ontario, according to a new legal analysis by the National Wildlife Federation and Ecojustice Canada.

Weak laws and lax enforcement undermine efforts to protect our water, wildlife and communities from this dangerous form of mining,” said Michelle Halley, National Wildlife Federation attorney. “There is an urgent need for the region to address these issues now or likely face decades of contamination and clean-up.” Continue reading

Club files legal challenge against Eagle Mine project

May 8, 2012
By JOHN PEPIN – Journal Staff Writer (jpepin@miningjournal.net) , The Mining Journal

MARQUETTE – A federal court judge set an expedited hearing date Monday to decide whether work should be shut down at the Kennecott Eagle Minerals Co. mine in Michigamme Township while a new lawsuit by the Huron Mountain Club against the mining company and several governmental agencies is decided.

Continue reading

KBIC appeals to UN, saying sulfide mining infringes on Native rights

Posted by Nicole Walton
May 7th, 2012

BARAGA, MI– The Keweenaw Bay Indian Community is claiming sulfide mining infringes on its indigenous rights and lands.

The KBIC has submitted a document to the United Nations outlining how mines like the one in Marquette County are being approved without the tribe’s consent. Continue reading

As Residents Fight Back, Sulfide Mining Strikes Again: Copperwood Project

Submitted by Michigan LCV on Wed, 05/09/2012 – 9:18am

by Alicia Prygoski, Special Projects Associate
Although countless Michigan residents have made it clear that they don’t want their pristine natural areas decimated by sulfide mines, the Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) doesn’t seem to want to listen.

In the same week that the Huron Mountain Club has made headway in opposing the ever-controversial Kennecott Eagle Mine, the DEQ has gone ahead and unleashed another sulfide mine on the Upper Peninsula, giving mining companies the right-of-way instead of considering the voices of the citizens who live there. Continue reading

Last chance beckons

May 7, 2012
The Mining Journal

To the Journal editor:

Once again we learn why vision is so important when it comes to electing our government officials as we grimace at John Pepin’s story “Board rejects new draft of mine tax.”

The Marquette County Board rejected the third draft of Rep. Huuki’s legislation creating a non-ferrous mining operations severance tax. To the board we say big deal. You have no negotiating position anymore because you foolishly placed yourself squarely behind Rio Tinto’s proposed mining operations from the onset.

Where are we now? The mine is in its final stages of construction. We know that yet another alternative road proposal has been found unacceptable by two of the three federal agencies with oversight responsibilities.

And now we learn that the amount of money the local government will receive as Rio Tinto extracts billions of dollars worth ore from the earth beneath Marquette County is about to be slashed in half.

And there’s absolutely nothing these powerless local officials can do about it. Why would anyone think that Rio Tinto wouldn’t find a way out of building a road in the first place? Why would any state elected official, who have nothing but disdain for local governments, do anything but cut their money?

My plea to the Marquette County Board is simple. Go now to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and demand that they require a permit under the Clean Water Act for the Eagle mine water discharges. It’s your last chance at redemption and it is the law.

Jeffery Loman

Anchorage, AK

Clearing the air: Mine pro details Rio Tinto work

Guest op-ed

May 6, 2012
Kristen Mariuzza – Environmental Engineer and Permitting Manager, Rio Tinto Eagle Mine , The Mining Journal

The Mining Journal recently reported on Rio Tinto’s application to obtain a new air permit for the Eagle Mine. Although we are required to have this permit to operate, we do understand that it is not necessarily the permit that is important to you. It is the assurance that you, your family, our employees and the surrounding environment is not affected by our emissions.

Not only am I part of the Rio Tinto team responsible for environmental performance at Eagle, I was also born and raised here in the Upper Peninsula along with many of you. I want to ensure that we, along with our children and future generations, can enjoy what the U.P. has to offer just as we always have. My responsibility is to ensure Rio Tinto constructs and operates in a world class environmentally protective manner. It is a commitment that we all stand behind.

In 2007, the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality issued all permits required to build and operate the Eagle Mine. We are dedicated to complying with our permits and all other environmental regulations that affect our operation.

Nearly five years have passed since permits were originally issued. Since then, we have refined the design of the mine, and have identified measures that will reduce overall emissions from our operations.

Anytime there is a change in the quality, nature or quantity of air emissions, The MDEQ requires a new permit to be issued. This will consolidate all required air quality standards into a comprehensive document, reducing the potential for noncompliance and improving the ability of regulators to enforce them.

Following are the key modifications realized to further reduce our emissions, resulting in the requirement for a new air permit application.

Eagle was originally designed with three diesel-fuelled generators to provide on-site power for all operations. We have since provided electrical service from Alger Delta and have removed these generators from the design with only a single stand by generator remaining.

Converting to grid electricity will virtually eliminate generator use and the corresponding emissions from both the generators and the fuel trucks traveling to the property. In addition, a portion of the electricity will come from renewable sources, a practice that is fully supported and important to us.

Additional refinements to the site resulted in a reduction to the already low dust emissions expected. Ore handling on the surface will occur in an enclosed building rather than a three-sided structure. Dust inside the mine has been reduced through the improved, eliminated or relocated material handling operations. Rock storage piles and transfers at our backfill plant will now occur indoors. And finally, we moved the crushing activities originally planned for the mine to the Humboldt Mill.

For perspective, the particulate emissions, primarily dust, from Eagle that is listed in our permit application, amount to less than one half of a percent of Marquette County’s total industry emissions. In addition, emissions from our mine ventilation system will be equivalent to about 15 home wood burners.

Along with these design changes, the watering program we instituted on Marquette County Road 510/Triple A will reduce vehicle dust by approximately 90 percent compared to before operations. We encourage the use of carpools and provide a bus service to the mine for our employees and contractors.

As part of our commitment to environmental performance, we continually work to ensure compliance with regulatory standards, improve overall air emissions performance, be an industry best practice leader and remain engaged on air quality issues. We constantly review our emissions, look for ways to improve our performance and apply controls to minimize potential impacts from our operations.

We are confident that we can build, operate, and close Eagle responsibly with respect to both the environment and surrounding community. To supplement efforts required by regulators, Eagle will establish independent community monitoring of environmental performance at the Eagle Mine and Humboldt Mill.

This will be a partnership of local universities, the community, local Native American communities and Eagle working together. The purpose of the community-monitoring program is to enable unfiltered information about our performance. We also expect it will identify ways we can improve how we protect the environment.

On this topic and other matters we encourage you to go to our website at kennecotteagleminerals.com, visit our Information Center in downtown Marquette or call us at 486-6970.

Editor’s note: Kristen Mariuzza, is environmental engineer and permitting manager for the Eagle Mine project.

Rio Tinto Eagle Mine

504 Spruce Street

Ishpeming, MI 49849

T 906-486-1257

F 906-486-1053

SWUP Open House April 17th and 19th

In Celebration of Earth Day, Save the Wild UP invites you to stop by our office for refreshments, door prizes and information! Learn how you can get involved in promoting sustainable environmental practices and protecting our beautiful UP from destructive mining proposals.

Tuesday April 17 & Thursday April 19

11:00am-4:00pm

OPEN ‘til 7:00pm on THURSDAY