Boundry Waters Area Protection by Biden (elections have consequences!)

kmudgn

Life of the Party

From NY Times​

Biden Administration Sets a Mining Ban in Boundary Waters Wilderness​

A 20-year moratorium on new mining activity for more than 225,000 acres of federal land in Minnesota could deal a fatal blow to a proposed Twin Metals copper-nickel mine.


An elevated view of an open expanse of wilderness land and water at sunset.

One of the world’s largest untapped copper deposits lies near Minnesota’s border with Canada.Credit...Tim Gruber for The New York Times


Lisa Friedman
By Lisa Friedman
Jan. 26, 2023
3 MIN READ
WASHINGTON — The Biden administration on Thursday said it will establish a 20-year moratorium on mining upstream from Minnesota’s Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, a vast preserve of lakes and woods that has been at the center of a fierce dispute over a proposed copper and nickel mine.
The plan withdraws from mineral leasing about 225,504 acres of watershed in the Superior National Forest. It could doom a proposed bid from Twin Metals Minnesota LLC, which had sought to build an underground mine in Ely, at the doorstep of the wilderness area. The Biden administration had already canceled the company’s two federal minerals-rights leases, and the new move drastically reduces the chance that the project will be revived.
The company has sued to reinstate the leases, which are critical to its $1.7 billion project, and the moratorium is expected to trigger fresh legal action. Meanwhile Republicans, who now control the House, are seeking to ease federal rules for the mine permitting process, an effort that could also complicate the administration’s plans.
Deb Haaland, the secretary of the Interior Department, signed the moratorium into effect early Thursday. She said in a statement the decision came after scientific review, as well as discussions with local and tribal groups, which concluded mining posed a potential for irreparable harm to the pristine Rainy River watershed, hunting and fishing rights held by the Chippewa tribes, and ecology that has created a $540 million annual outdoor tourism industry in the area.
“Protecting a place like Boundary Waters is key to supporting the health of the watershed and its surrounding wildlife, upholding our Tribal trust and treaty responsibilities, and boosting the local recreation economy,” Ms. Haaland said.


The mineral deposits “are vital in meeting our nation’s goals to transition to a clean energy future, to create American jobs, to strengthen our national security and to bolster domestic supply chains,” the company said. “We believe our project plays a critical role in addressing all of these priorities, and we remain committed to enforcing Twin Metals’ rights.”





Image
A woman stands at a lectern wearing a blue suit jacket.

Deb Haaland at a 2021 event. On Thursday she said the mining moratorium “is key to supporting the health of the watershed and its surrounding wildlife” and boosting tourism

The moratorium comes at a challenging time for the Biden administration, which is working to significantly increase the use of solar panels, wind turbines, electric vehicle and other renewable energy. To accomplish that, the government is trying to create a domestic supply chain of critical minerals like cobalt, lithium and copper. Republicans have said that decisions like canceling leases in Minnesota fly in the face of the administration’s stated goals.



“America needs to develop our vast mineral wealth, right here at home, with high-wage, union-protected jobs instead of continuing to send American taxpayer dollars to countries like the Congo that use child slave labor,” Representative Peter Stauber, who represents northeastern Minnesota, said in a statement. He said China, which dominates the critical minerals industry, will benefit from Mr. Biden’s decision and said the administration “continues to hand our foreign adversaries every advantage possible.”

Minnesota Democrats and environmental groups hailed the decision as the most important land conservation measure in the state in decades.
“This is a huge deal. The Boundary Waters is a crown jewel,” said Becky Rom, national chair of the Campaign to Save the Boundary Waters, an advocacy group. Ms. Rom, who lives in Ely, said her organization and others were prepared to fight any lawsuits that challenge the decision.

Representative Betty McCollum, Democrat of Minnesota, who has introduced legislation to permanently prohibit Twin Metals from mining copper and nickel in the Superior National Forest, said the decision “will preserve America’s most visited wilderness area for the next generation.”
Ms. McCollum maintained the area’s pristine freshwater faced likely contamination from heavy metals and sulfuric acid from mine tailings that could have spread through the Boundary Waters’ 1.1 million acres of interconnected lakes and streams.

Republican and Democrat administrations have long battled over the watershed area.
President Barack Obama’s administration initially recommended a 20-year mining moratorium in late 2016, citing the potential environmental risks to the Boundary Waters if copper-nickel mines were allowed to open. The U.S. Forest Service began an environmental review of the proposal. President Trump then reversed that decision and reinstated the leases.

Interior Department officials said Thursday the new moratorium will not affect existing leases.
 
We fully support sharing this type of info, but in the future, let's keep the political jabs a bit more muted. Yes, elections do have consequences, but using that type of rhetoric is unnecessary when the reader can come to those conclusions on their own. Leaving that out helps promote our aim for civil discourse.
 
Last edited:
Kmudgen,
Can't tell if you are happy or not based on thread title. If you're not happy about this, I suspect you have never been to the BWCA.
Get an education for your self outdoors and go...
Some things are worth more as they are than what can be extracted from them...
Opening this up to a giant mine won't do shit to the world copper supply other than trash an amazing wilderness area and enrich a few dozen big fish.
Griswald
(Spent 25 summers in BWCA/Quetico Provincial Park)

And if you think I am wrong-ask anybody who is over 40 about the Missabe Iron range and its collapse in the 1960s and 1970s and what it did to the local economy. Further, Antofagasta PLC is the Chilean Mining company who is behind all of this crap.
Griswald
 
Kmudgen,
Can't tell if you are happy or not based on thread title. If you're not happy about this, I suspect you have never been to the BWCA.
Get an education for your self outdoors and go...
Some things are worth more as they are than what can be extracted from them...
Opening this up to a giant mine won't do shit to the world copper supply other than trash an amazing wilderness area and enrich a few dozen big fish.
Griswald
(Spent 25 summers in BWCA/Quetico Provincial Park)

And if you think I am wrong-ask anybody who is over 40 about the Missabe Iron range and its collapse in the 1960s and 1970s and what it did to the local economy. Further, Antofagasta PLC is the Chilean Mining company who is behind all of this crap.
Griswald
The post was announcing a 20 year moratorium on mining in the Boundary Waters. I'm pretty sure he's happy about it. If not, I think the rest of us are.
 
Boundary Waters definitely deserved to be protected.
Spent some time up there as a Boy Scout oh so many years ago. Fantastic experience.
Hope my grandkids also get to experience it.
Still, quite a bit different now based on relatively recent excursions up there.
When I was up there as a Boy Scout, we dipped our canteens in the water and drank....no filtration, and no side effects,
wouldn't do that now. Sawyer water filter now required.
but the fishing was fantastic, the solitude of untouched wilderness immense.
There's still that feeling of the smallness of one human vs. the wild up there, but it's faded significantly in the last 40 years.
Keep the extraction industries out or lose that primal indigenous feeling.
A no brainer in my opinion.
 
Back
Top