Nature Canada

Another Fake Lake?

Mining company Taseko plans to reclassify two interior BC waterbodies, Fish Lake and Little Fish Lake, as tailings impoundment areas (toxic waste dump sites!) and create an artificial lake as compensation for the resulting loss of fish habitat. However, a recently released report from the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency reviewing the Project stated “that the Project would result in significant adverse environmental effects,” calling into question Taseko’s plans.
One specific adverse effect of reclassifying Teztan Biny (Fish Lake) and Y’anah Biny (Little Fish Lake) into tailings impoundment areas is “the destruction of approximately 90,000 rainbow trout” which is “an important food source (for First Nations) when salmon populations are low.” The creation of the replacement lake, called Prosperity Lake, would not “adequately mitigate the losses of the fishing and recreational experience at Teztan Biny (Fish Lake),” the Panel found.
The Tsilhqot’in First Nation, local community, and environmental groups are strongly opposed to the Project for numerous reasons.
The creation of tailings impoundment areas out of pristine Canadian lakes and rivers has received more attention as industry further exploits the Metal Mining Effluent Regulations, Schedule 2 “loophole” of the federal Fisheries Act. Some lakes that were destined to perpetual toxicity are being spared, such as Bamoos Lake in northern Ontario. Others require long legal battles and strong public support with an unpredictable end, such as Sandy Pond, in Newfoundland.
The plaintiff in that case, the Sandy Pond Alliance (including Council of Canadians, the Sierra Club of Canada, the Newfoundland and Labrador Natural History Society, MiningWatch Canada, and others) is arguing that “it is illegal for the federal government to allow the dumping of mining waste into Canadian lakes and rivers.” The Alliance hopes to put an end to the practice of converting Canadian lakes into mining waste dumps once and for all.
If they succeed, Taseko will have to explore other waste management options around the Prosperity Lake Project. MiningWatch Canada has more information and details on how to send a letter to the Prime Minister, the Minister of the Environment and your MP to deny approval to this damaging project.
This blog post was contributed by Nature Canada volunteer Stefan Kohut. Thanks for the update, Stefan!
Photo: Highland Valley Copper Tailings Dam by Gord McKenna/Flickr

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