Title: Abandoned Mines in Canada: the MiningWatch Canada Strategy
1Abandoned Mines in Canadathe MiningWatch Canada
Strategy
2The Problem in 1999
- Over 10,000 abandoned mines in Canada
- Very little public awareness of the issue
- Provincial governments responsible for mines in
their jurisdiction - Federal government responsible for uranium, and
mines in north - Little political will to do anything
3Britannia Mine
4Britannia Mine Pouring AMD (Acid Mine Drainage)
into Howe Sound
- Discharge from old adits
- at 2200 and 4100 levels
- Metals-contaminated tailings
- flowing into Howe Sound
- Contaminated ground-water
- Former infrastructure
5Faro MineOver 250 million and counting
- Lead/zinc mine, operated 1969-1998
- 3 large open pits
- Waste rock dumps
- 57 million tonnes
- of tailings
- Seepage from
- tailings pond
6Giant Mine237,000 tonnes of arsenic tri-oxide
7Giant Mine
- 237,000 tonnes of arsenic tri-oxide stored in 15
underground chambers - On surface, arsenic contaminated
buildings,tailings and oils, asbestos - Produced 7 million ounces of gold 1948-1999
- Plan is to freeze the arsenic and surrounding
rock underground - Tailings covers, demolish buildings
8Giant Mine bulkhead
9Colomac Mine
10Colomac
- 222 kms north of Yellowknife
- Operated 1989-1997
- Tailings area full to overflowing cyanide,
ammonia, metals - Affecting food chain, caribou and fish
11Hollinger MineThreatening Timmins
12Timmins Sinkhole 2005Crown Pillar Collapse
13Kam KotiaMore acidic than battery acid
- 6 million tonnes of acid-generating tailings
- Zinc/copper mine 1943-61
- Metals in Kamikotia River
- Sediments in river
- contaminated
- Run-off pH1.8-2.5
- Over 55 million
14Mt. Washington MineDestroying a 2 million/year
salmon fishery
15Port RadiumLeaving a village of widows
16Port Radium
- Mined for silver and radium 1929-1940 for
uranium 1942-1960 for silver 1964-82 - 1.7 million tonnes if uranium and silver tailings
on site (contained) and in Great Bear Lake
(uncontained) - Remediation plan being prepared
17Deloro Miners100 years of miningonly toxins left
18Deloro MineArsenic and radioactivity
19The context
- A series of shocking problems with mines
- 1987- Highway collapses at Cobalt
- 1990- Matachawan tailings dam breaks
- 1995- Mt Washington destroying fishery
- 1996- EMCBC calls attention to Britannia, others
- 1997-1999- a number of mines go bankrupt in the
North - ICME commissions paper on reclamation bonding
- MMSD report 2001
20Governments beginning to pay attention
- 1993- Canadian Council of Ministry of the
Environment issues report on contaminated sites - 1998- Canada-Wide Accord on Environmental
Harmonization affirms polluter pays principle - 1999 Ontario announces 27 million for cleanup
- EMCBC petitions Commission for Environmental
Cooperation about Britannia, Mt. Washington and
Tulsequah Chief
21Our strategy
- Research all available information
- Build public awareness of issues and particular
mines inform our colleagues, media - Make the federal government pay attention to the
issue briefs to cabinet lobby with others - Develop a national task force with public
servants and industry
22What We Did
- Raised hell about individual mines
- Hired W. O. Mackasey to research inventories
- Distributed the papers to eight federal cabinet
ministers and the press - Called for
- A National Inventory
- A transparent system for ranking hazards
- Emergency response Mechanisms
- A funding mechanism to recover costs from the
industry
23National Orphaned and Abandoned Mines Initiative
(NOAMI)
- In early 2000, set up a meeting with Mining
Association of Canada - Agreed to work together to get federal and
provincial governments aware and involved - Complete disagreement on polluter pays
- Conference with communities, industry,
federal/provincial governments, and
Auditor-Generals office in June 2001
24Planning the Winnipeg Conference
25NOAMI Accomplishments
- Web site www.abandoned-mines.org
- Conference on assessing liability and funding
approaches November 2005 - National database researched and will be in place
this fall - Finished four major reports
- Funding Approaches
- Legal and Institutional Barriers to Collaboration
- Community Involvement (case studies)
- Establishing a National Database
26Green Budget Coalition
- Worked with an Ecological
- Fiscal Reform Coalition
- to put forward the
- Clean Canada Fund
- Intensive lobbying
- with other groups
27Building the Pressure
- Conference with Assembly of First Nations
- Reports on Full Costs and Mining in the Boreal
- Other NGOs take on specific sites
- Giant CARC (Canadian Arctic Resources
Committee) - Faro and Mt. Nansen YCS (Yukon Conservation
Society) - Kam Kotia Northwatch
- Port Radium Dene of Deline
- Renabi Missinabie Cree
28Federal Government Responds
- Auditor-Generals report November 2002
- Treasury Board demands accounting from
departments - August 2003 CEC report slams federal government
- Series of articles syndicated December 2003
- March 2004 federal accounting changes
- Budget January 2004 175 million for abandoned
mines clean-up - Budget April 2004 4 billion for federal
contaminated sites
29Indications of Success
- Money available and work begun on federal mines
- Aboriginal communities involved in cleanup
- Some provinces have announced money for clean-up
25 million in B.C, 27 million in Ontario
30Challenges
- Making sure the federal money is well spent
- Making sure reclamation costs are covered
- Getting polluters to pay the costs
- Getting proper remediation of sites
- Getting each province to act
31Future Strategy
- Ensure we know what governments are doing in key
cases - Highlight on-going problems through media,
colleagues - Provide support to communities (technical
assistance, publicity, networking) - Continue work with NOAMI provincial laws,
polluter pays, reclamation bonding
32Schist LakeBefore and After Closure