The proposed mine threatens Nass and Unuk watersheds, relies on an outdated environmental assessment
VANCOUVER/UNCEDED xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (MUSQUEAM), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (SQUAMISH), AND səlilwətaɬ (TSLEIL-WAUTUTH) TERRITORIES — December 2, 2024
Ecojustice recently filed a judicial review on behalf of SkeenaWild Conservation Trust and the Southeast Alaska Indigenous Transboundary Commission (SEITC), challenging the B.C. Environmental Assessment Office’s (EAO) decision that the proposed Kerr-Sulphurets-Mitchell (KSM) mine is “substantially started.”
The KSM mine is proposed by KSM Mining ULC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Seabridge Gold. If built, the KSM mine would become one of the world’s largest gold-copper mines, with four open pits, two underground mines, and massive tailings ponds with earthen dams over 700 feet high. These ponds would store 2.3 billion tonnes of tailings waste—28 times the size of the tailings pond involved in the Mount Polley disaster—and require ongoing maintenance for at least 250 years. After this, the tailings dams will remain in place in perpetuity.
The mine’s location threatens the Nass and Unuk rivers, which support several species of Pacific salmon and eulachon and are vital to nearby communities for culture, subsistence, recreation, and their local economies. “The Unuk River is our lifeline. The fish and wildlife it supports are the reason our people have thrived here since time immemorial. Stewarding the Unuk is our inherent right, passed down from our grandmothers from generations and generations ago,” said Lee Wagner, SEITC Assistant Executive Director.
Under B.C.’s Environmental Assessment Act, projects must be substantially started within a set period or their environmental certificates expire. If the certificate lapses, the proponent must complete a new environmental assessment using current information, laws, and science. In the case of KSM, its environmental assessment predates significant legislative changes, such as the updated Environmental Assessment Act and the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, and a deeper understanding of climate change, threats to salmon populations, and lessons learned from the Mount Polley mine tailings disaster.
“The environmental assessment for the KSM mine is over 10 years old. The lawsuit says that during this time, the company failed to substantially start the project, as required by the Environmental Assessment Act” said Ecojustice lawyer Rachel Gutman. “There are good reasons why the law has expiration dates for environmental assessments, including ensuring that mega projects like the KSM mine do not proceed based on outdated information. This is particularly important in this case due to the rapidly changing climate in Northern BC.”
The group also says that the EAO wrongly considered that a substantial start decision would support the mining company in obtaining project funding. “We believe it is inappropriate for the EAO, the agency tasked with assessing the environmental impacts of a project, to consider how their decision might support a company with project funding” said Greg Knox, executive director, SkeenaWild Conservation Trust.
The British Columbia First Nation Tsetsaut Skii km Lax Ha has also recently filed a legal challenge to the EAO’s substantial start determination, arguing they were inadequately consulted. The mining company plans to store the mine’s waste within Tsetsaut Skii km Lax Ha traditional territory in the Upper Nass River area.
The legal challenge seeks to overturn the EAO’s decision, ensuring that projects like KSM are assessed under current environmental laws and using up to date information and science. A victory in this case could set an important precedent and prevent companies from holding on to environmental certificates based on outdated information and science indefinitely.
Media contacts:
Shayo Mehta, communications strategist | Ecojustice
T: 604-685-5618, 1-800-926-7744 ext. 249| smehta@ecojustice.ca
Sonia Luokkala, communications director | SEITC
T. 907-406-9431 | sonia.luokkala@gmail.com
Greg Knox, executive director | SkeenaWild T: 250-615-1990 | gregk@skeenawild.org
About:
Ecojustice uses the power of the law to defend nature, combat climate change, and fight for a healthy environment. Its strategic, public interest lawsuits and advocacy lead to precedent-setting court decisions and law and policy that deliver lasting solutions to Canada’s most urgent environmental problems. As Canada’s largest environmental law charity, Ecojustice operates offices in Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, Ottawa, and Halifax.
Formed in 2007, SkeenaWild Conservation Trust works throughout northwestern BC to conserve freshwater systems, salmon populations, and the human and animal communities that depend on these resources. Established in 2014, Southeast Alaska Indigenous Transboundary Commission (SEITC) is a coalition of federally recognized Tribal governments dedicated to protecting transboundary rivers and traditional ways of life from rapid industrialization and mining development occurring in the Canadian headwaters.