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Alaska demanding action on B C mining oversight

Alaska demanding action on B.C. mining oversight Doyle Potenteau © AP File Photo / Mead Gruver In 2020, 22 U.S. and Canadian researchers published a letter critical of B.C. s environmental assessment and oversight, calling it weak and ineffective. The United States government has approved $3.6 million in spending to help Alaska pressure B.C.’s government into reforming mining regulations they claim are lax and present an imminent threat to fish and habitat in transboundary watersheds. On Dec. 21, U.S. Congress approved the Consolidated Appropriations Act for 2021 that included $3.1 million for the United States Geological Survey (USGS) to expand a 2019 baseline water-quality monitoring program on rivers downstream from B.C. mines.

Alaska demands action on B C mining oversight

For five years, Alaskan Indigenous tribes and conservation groups have pushed for government involvement over worries of 12 proposed B.C. mines in northwest B.C. near salmon-bearing rivers that cross into the Alaskan panhandle.  As proof of inadequate regulatory oversight, they point to the 2014 breached tailings pond at the Mount Polly Mine in southern B.C. that released billions of litres of industrial waste into lakes and waterways.  “Historically, 80 per cent of southeast Alaska king salmon [chinook] have come from the transboundary Taku, Stikine and Unuk Rivers and yet, by this spring, all three rivers’ king salmon populations will likely be listed as stocks of concern, and B.C. is rushing through more than a dozen [very large] projects just over the Alaska border in those same river systems,” said Jill Weitz, director of Salmon Beyond Borders. 

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