The Pebble Blog

The gigantic Pebble copper and gold prospect in Southwest Alaska is one of the touchiest topics in Alaska today.

In this blog, I'll track news that is significant or interesting about the Pebble project. I'll also try to generate discussion and information sharing about some of the claims and counterclaims about the project, and mining in general.

Please keep your comments courteous and on topic. If you violate the ADN comment policy, your posts will be deleted.

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About Elizabeth Bluemink ebluemink@adn.com

I've been writing about mining in Alaska since 2004 and without a doubt, it is one of the most interesting topics that I cover at the Daily News. I've been a newspaper reporter for the past 10 years. In the Deep South, I specialized in reporting about environmental conflicts and pollution cleanups. For two years, I covered commercial fishing, mining and logging in Southeast Alaska. In my current job as a Daily News business reporter, I write about mining, tourism, Native corporations and other businesses.


Keystone meetings in Anchorage and elsewhere - 10/13/2008 12:28 pm

Big mineral discovery near Yakutat? (updated) - 10/2/2008 11:18 am

New Pebble data - 9/30/2008 11:38 am

Acid rock drainage at Kensington tailings site (updated) - 9/30/2008 8:02 am

Wash Post: Palin and "mining interests" - 9/25/2008 9:56 pm

Kensington alternative tailings plan implodes - 9/23/2008 2:50 pm

The other Bristol Bay environmental controversy - 9/11/2008 6:26 pm

Watching the Kensington case - 9/10/2008 5:25 pm

Did Palin break the law? - 9/9/2008 5:52 pm

Pebble Update - 9/5/2008 11:57 am

Red Dog Mine settlement in final stretch - 9/3/2008 4:09 pm

Anglo in Canada - 9/2/2008 10:58 am

Tuesday night's election story - 8/28/2008 10:00 am

Various statements today on Measure 4 - 8/27/2008 8:07 pm

Measure 4 results from around Alaska - 8/27/2008 2:53 pm

It's back up - 8/23/2008 2:01 pm

New York Times - 8/22/2008 8:13 pm

Is this ad right? (updated) - 8/22/2008 7:38 pm

The state's Measure 4 web site - 8/22/2008 7:12 pm

Measure 4-related item from ADN's politics blog.... - 8/22/2008 4:58 pm

APOC - 8/22/2008 2:18 pm

APOC: Web site must come down - 8/21/2008 10:20 pm

Mines and enviros settle for third-party monitoring

Recently, the company that owns the Kensington Mine near Juneau reached an agreement with Southeast Alaska environmentalists allowing that project to proceed despite an adverse ruling in the federal 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

Today, a mining company and environmentalists announced an agreement enabling the embattled Crown Jewel gold mine to proceed in Washington state.

Here's a few interesting sentences from the AP story that ran in the Seattle Times this morning:

Dave Kliegman, executive director of the Okanogan Highlands Alliance, said the agreement with Crown Resources Corp. ends 18 years of disputes over the project east of Oroville near Chesaw, just south of the Canadian border. Crown Resources is a subsidiary of Kinross Gold Corp. of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

The agreement calls for improved monitoring and mitigation, including third-party water quality monitoring and other environmental protections above those called for by state and federal regulatory agencies, Kliegman said.

"We thought we had a good case, but we could get more by settling than we could get in court," Kliegman said by telephone from his home in rural Okanogan County. "The company wanted it really bad now, so they were willing to give us more than we could get from federal and state regulations."

Crown Resources Vice President Lauren Roberts said the agreement means the project will move forward, with ore scheduled to begin moving from the mine in August.

"With the settlement language, it's the final step along the way of the project becoming a reality," he said by telephone from Republic. "It removes any uncertainty with respect to jobs and economic benefits in this area, which you know is a fairly depressed region."


  2     April 19, 2008 - 8:43am | ahnamarlene

WHO-WHAT- WHERE?

whos gonna show us the ORIGINAL initiatives just for the pebble mine,what it means?what does the FUTURE holds for us RURAL ALASKAN original descends of this land?did they had a hold of the EXXON valdez incident beforehand?,are they gonna squeeze out any future litigation dammages from the future mines?likewise with the EXXON incident "only time will tell",these are the people having to go on with the ACE of spades missing on the table RIGHT!like taking candy away from a baby,all you need is a pick and shovel like how our Native descends did to make these big outfits look good.AND its still happening..

  1     April 18, 2008 - 6:02pm | Sockeyemark

I'll be depressed

If pebble mine ever turns a shovel!

  April 19, 2008 - 9:41am | rfn

Is that

a good thing?

  April 20, 2008 - 4:02pm | Sockeyemark

The real story

I was director of environmental affairs with Cominco, reporting to the president during the time when this mine was starting up.

Red Dog Creek runs 2 1/2 miles from the Red Dog Mine to Ikalukrok Creek, which, 25 miles later, enters the Wulik River. It was a small stream dependent on precipitation and groundwater, and it was frozen solid in the winter. Based on a handful of samples, collected only after substantial exploration disturbance had occurred, it had low water quality caused by heavy metal and acidic discharge that impacted it as far as the Ikalukrok. This was the greatest extent of any reported natural contamination.

Once mining began this drastically changed. The Red Dog Mine water management plan suffered from inadequate hydrologic, meteorological, and geologic baseline data. For example, no groundwater data were collected for mine planning, and when an aquifer laced with heavy metals was intercepted there were no plans to redirect it from Red Dog Creek.

Combined with unanticipated precipitation and permafrost melt, acid mine drainage flooded into Red Dog Creek, contaminating the Ikalukrok and Wulik River to the sea. In 1991 the Environmental Protection Agency ordered remedial action, but Red Dog management evidently did not take it seriously. The EPA-ordered drainage ditch did not extend the length of the acid generating area, the liner in the ditch was perforated with shot rock and leaked like a sieve, and the water treatment plant did not work anyway. Contamination of the Ikalukrok and Wulik continued.

Several belated years later the EPA again took action. This time a $4.7 million penalty caught the attention of new Red Dog management. Apparently the acid drainage problems have been resolved, the treatment plant works and clean water is routinely discharged into Red Dog Creek. Trout should be there. The stream hydrology has been completely altered in accordance with the EPA order.

But the mystery to me is this: How can clean water opponents and Pebble supporters claim that finally improving stream hydrology in 2 1/2 miles of a little creek is a credit to the mining industry and support for the disastrous Pebble project, when for fifteen or more years the Wulik River with important grayling and Dolly Varden populations, not to mention one of Alaska's largest Arctic char runs, was annually poisoned?

Here's the important point: Teck Cominco has more experience building big mines in the North than any company in the world, and with a better environmental record than most. Cominco discovered the Pebble property in 1986 and conducted extensive exploration on it for several years, including during my tenure. In 2002 Teck Cominco sold it to Northern Dynasty for a measly $10 million and without retaining a position in it. In 2003 Northern Dynasty "discovers" the biggest gold/copper deposit in the world and soon Anglo American is its partner. Northern Dynasty and its parent company, Hunter Dickinson, have never planned, built or operated a mine anywhere. Anglo American has never built a mine in North America let alone in the North.

Now, consider all the problems Red Dog has had and the vastly more difficult environment at Pebble where there is four times as much precipitation, the water table is on the surface, and it overlies the most active seismic area in North America. Then ask this: How can Vancouver stock promoters and inexperienced South Africans protect this environment when the best and most experienced northern mining company had so many problems for so long in the far more benign environment at Red Dog, and, in light of all their experience, walked away from Pebble?

  April 21, 2008 - 3:10pm | pebble_blog

For a minute...

I thought you were claiming to be Dr. Switzer.

Fyi, I've noticed that some people who comment on this blog are posting the same thing over and over on different threads.

Please don't do this. It's like watching a rerun right after you watched the original program....