Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Canadian Mine Waste Disasters; Possibility Pooh-Poohed In WI

Canadians are getting a look at a massive new metals' mine waste disaster (there was an earlier one in, I'm not kidding you, Tarsandia) and it's not a pretty sight and site for a region in British Columbia, and its drinking water: 
Some 10 million cubic meters (2.6 billion gallons) of water and 4.5 million cubic meters of fine sand spilled into Polley Lake, the province's Minister of Energy and Mines Bill Bennett said in a statement.
Bennett said the flow may have continued into nearby Quesnel Lake. He said the impact on the watershed is unknown, and the ministry has been testing the water. 
Hazeltine Creek, which flows out of Polley Lake, had been a 4-foot (1.2-meter) stream, but it is now 150 feet wide, the Cariboo Regional District government said in a separate statement.
A still photo taken from video provided by the Cariboo Regional District of a helicopter overflight of the stricken area.
A still photo taken from video provided by the Cariboo Regional District of a helicopter overflight of the stricken area. (Cariboo Regional District)

You may remember that we took a look at the potential for calamitous slides and spills in the Bad River watershed where an open-pit, mountain-top iron mine, waste pile and wetlands filling is being proposed.

Our interest was peaked when a company spokesman said it had plans to take care of any potential slide and waste spills during 35 years of mining as they hope to turn the mine pit (4.5 miles long, 700 ft. deep, and a mile wide at a minimum) and all that waste rock into a nice new swimming hole and recreational hill planted with new trees.

Here is a link to the posting from 14 months ago, and I think I'll copy it all out, below:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MONDAY, JUNE 24, 2013As GTAC Plans Waste Rock, Mine Debris Dumping For 35 Years, Consider...

What's happening right now to toxic waste and tailing dump sites in Tarsandia, Canada:
Fort McMurray, Home to 176 Square km of Tar Sands Tailings Ponds, Overwhelmed by Floods
More proof for the argument I made here about the GTAC mine's projected glorious operations and reclamation, even though the rock, containing acidic-producing elements, will be dumped in lakes, on a watershed, near rice-growing estuaries close to Lake Superior:
[Spokesman Bob] Seitz said the process would involve the creation of what would essentially be a large hill of mining tailings that would be covered over with earth and replanted at the conclusion of open-pit mining activities in the first stage. The second stage would dispose of its tailings in the first pit, while the second pit would, at the conclusion of its operational life, be turned into a 355-acre lake. That lake would be graded to produce gentle slopes, making it conducive to recreational uses.
And:
“Once you build that hill, you can cover a portion of it with topsoil, you can concurrently reclaim it, which means that you have a much smaller portion of the waste area that is open and by the time the process is complete, you are actually going to have mature trees or whatever the reclamation plan calls for,” Seitz said. 
Color me skeptical.
And skeptical, also, because of this:
MONDAY, JUNE 24, 2013

Check Out This Account Of Recent, Massive Open Pit Mine Slide

Since we're on the topic of open pit mine operation, safety, and planning right here in Wisconsin - - take note that there was in April the biggest landslide at a massive open pit copper mine in Utah in 36 years, and it began with movement measured in a fraction of an inch.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Aerial shot of landslide in Bingham Canyon copper-gold mine near Salty Lake City, Utah. Photo courtesy Kennecott Utah Copper via Facebook.

4 comments:

James Rowen said...

You should be blogging about this, too.

Anonymous said...

I am... Why did you assume otherwise?

But your the "purple" guy and the mainstream media is entirely failing us which is how we got a divide-and-conquer governor.

Why did you use the word "too"?

You are not bloggin' or reporting on this (you're the professional journalist, right?) and neither is anyone at journal communications, lee enterprises, gannet, or clear channel.

I will stack the work I have done to educate and inform against anyone in Wisconsin you wish -- but this isn't about me so I don't grandstand.

But I am working to see if others can share a story that the media is silent on.

I have many sourcing documents that verify the region is going to be a mecca of frac sand mines and the only reason it isn't happening right now is because there is not dedicated service.

The media reports on this transaction are lies -- this is not about the 7 shippers on the line nor about building jobs in Reedsburg.

This is the end-game to a pay-to-play.

James Rowen said...

I am satisfied with I write on this blog and at Purple WI. I write openly. You do not. You hide here behind the cloak of anonymity and escape the full weight of reader reaction.

I have seen your work. It is easily identifiable through your catch phrases. I wonder why it is anonymous, and why you expend so much energy commenting here, often in attack mode?

And with claims that the JS is my boss, which you know is not true, as I left its payroll 18 years ago.





Anonymous said...

Your blog allows anonymous comments -- so don't blame me -- unlike you, I don't proclaim to the world that its about me.

Appropriate -- now I know why virtually no one else comments here.

If you can't take the comments, disable anon posts and quit blamin' those that use them (most posts here are anon).

Your last statement says a great deal about your style of "journalism".

I did not state your boss was js -- but making that up served your purpose.