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.


Pebble doles out grant money - 11/9/2009 4:41 pm

Hardrock mineral exploration, 07-09 statistics - 11/9/2009 2:12 pm

Diocese takes stance on water pollution - 10/23/2009 6:21 pm

Lots of Pebble-related news - 10/23/2009 5:02 pm

Pebble poll results - 9/22/2009 9:57 am

Pebble Update - 9/21/2009 1:06 pm

Supreme Court on Ballot Measure 4 - 9/18/2009 4:40 pm

Polling on Pebble - 9/18/2009 1:01 pm

Anglo exec moves up Forbes' most powerful women list - 8/19/2009 9:16 pm

Federal regulators give nod to Kensington - 8/14/2009 4:06 pm

Sockeye salmon meltdown - 8/13/2009 4:27 pm

Vacationing at old copper mines - 8/13/2009 2:19 pm

Maintaining water for fish - 8/10/2009 1:44 pm

Bicycling against Pebble - 8/7/2009 7:13 pm

Anglo profits slide - 8/1/2009 4:34 pm

Pebble says no dumping in Iliamna Lake - 7/30/2009 11:38 am

Pebble lawsuit: the cutting room floor - 7/30/2009 9:48 am

State rebuffs petition to dismiss charges against mine proponents - 7/28/2009 5:09 pm

Feds review new financial assurances for mines - 7/22/2009 6:27 pm

Anglo American has new chairman - 7/22/2009 3:40 pm

Pebble Blog lives again - 7/22/2009 3:20 pm

Pebble Blog on hiatus - 7/10/2009 11:09 am

Diocese takes stance on water pollution

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Here's a resolution that was approved by the Orthodox Diocese of Alaska at its annual Assembly in Anchorage this week.


Resolution of the Assembly of the Orthodox Diocese of Sitka, Anchorage and Alaska Concerning the Sanctity of the Earth and the Responsibility all Alaskan Native People serve as its Guardians and Protectors

Whereas, according to the traditions and teachings of Alaska Native peoples, the Earth and the whole creation have always been perceived and experienced as filled with the sacred presence of Life, and

Whereas, historically Alaska Native peoples have approached all living and life-sustaining elements with reverence and respect, and

Whereas, in the Sacred Scriptures our Orthodox Christian Tradition, the creation of the world began with the Spirit of God moving on the face of the Deep, and

Whereas, God so loved the KOSMOS, meaning the whole creation, that He sent His Son into the world to bless, renew and sanctify it, and

Whereas, at the beginning of His earthly ministry, Our Lord Jesus Christ came first to the waters of the Jordan and

Whereas, at the time of His baptism, the Holy Trinity was revealed as the Voice of the Father spoke from heaven and the Holy Spirit descended upon the waters in the form of a Dove to renew the creation, and

Whereas, in commemoration of the Baptism of Our Lord each year the Church celebrates the Great Blessing of Water at lakes, streams and on the coasts of the seas and oceans, and

Whereas, in the sacramental and liturgical life of the Church, the Great Blessing of Waters is a normal and regular feature of every baptism and

Whereas, the parishes of the Orthodox Diocese, founded at Kodiak in 1794 have been conducting this rite of blessing and sanctification for more than two hundred years in Alaska, and

Whereas, it is therefore the belief and sacred tradition of Alaskan Orthodox people that the lakes, rivers, streams and ocean are sacred to us, and

Whereas, that which is sacred must be treated with utmost respect, care and reverence and guarded from any danger of defilement, desecration or pollution,

Be it resolved that the Orthodox Church in Alaska calls upon all appropriate state and federal agencies to reject any so-called commercial or economic “development” that in any way threatens the viability, purity and sanctity of the natural world, especially the rivers and lakes which we hold sacred by both God’s original blessing and the continued invocation of the Holy Spirit to bless and sanctify the rivers and lakes along which our communities have been established for thousands of years, and

Be it further Resolved that the Orthodox Church in Alaska welcomes and invokes God’s Blessing upon all those who would bring economic development to our communities provided they can prove by successful and continuing operation elsewhere on earth, (and not hypothetically or theoretically), that they can conduct such activities without potential or significant harm to the natural environment or polluting the waters which we hold blessed and sacred.


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