Close Menu
Metals Weekly
    TRENDING -
    • Companies join a deep-sea mining rush after Trump executive order, as regulators fast-track permits
    • Iran war squeezes acid, aluminum, miners’ margins
    • Soaring scrap aluminum exports threaten UK defence, auto supply chains, industry group says
    • Kazatomprom sees room for all in nuclear revival
    • Gold price holds gain as Trump touts reopening of Hormuz this week
    • Resouro PEA points to $1B potential rare earth and titanium project
    • Venezuelan crime boss’s demise creates opening for mining boost
    • Rinehart’s $1B SpaceX bet targets mining beyond Earth
    Metals Weekly
    • Home
    • Critical Materials
    • Environment
    • Global Policy
    • Mining
    Metals Weekly
    Home»Environment»Boundary Waters’ headwaters too vulnerable for copper mining

    Boundary Waters’ headwaters too vulnerable for copper mining

    Environment 4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    The News Tribune’s April 22 “Our View” editorial lauding the reversal of the 20-year moratorium on mining on federal lands upstream from the Boundary Waters displayed an unfortunate eagerness to credit copper mining industry propaganda. I am not anti-mining. My grandfather was an Ely iron miner. But there are some places too valuable and too vulnerable for copper mining — and the headwaters of the Boundary Waters is one such place.

    The editorial (“ Federal action gives modern mining the chance it deserves ”) was littered with factual errors.

    Northland Outdoor Forecast: Warmer weather for the start of May
    The administration of President Joe Biden did not skip the “congressional review” required by law for the moratorium protecting the Boundary Waters watershed. It followed the letter of the law, including giving the required notices and reports to every government office to which notice was mandated and to all of Minnesota’s members of Congress. The administration of President Donald Trump, with the complicity of 8th Congressional District Rep. Pete Stauber, fabricated the claim that notice had not been given in 2023 and “reissued” notice this year to justify the fraudulent use of the Congressional Review Act to overturn the order.

    The moratorium did not ban helium exploration.

    The moratorium was not “appeasement to far-left supporters” from the Biden administration. The processes under law that led to the mining moratorium in the Rainy River Headwaters portion of the Boundary Waters watershed included 454 days for public comment, eight public listening sessions, 675,000 written comments in support of protecting the Boundary Waters, and 22 scientific resource reports. The moratorium was the result of the overwhelming support for a ban on copper mining in the headwaters of the Boundary Waters and of the science showing the dire risk that mining would pose. Trump’s pollster, Fabrizio Ward, found that 70% of Minnesotans oppose copper mining upstream from the Boundary Waters.

    Contrary to the editorial, Antofagasta’s Twin Metals submitted a mine plan for review in December 2019; it was rejected by state and federal agencies.

    If Antofagasta was allowed to dig its Twin Metals mine, it would benefit China’s industrial development, not our green economy. Antofagasta sends its copper to China for smelting and sale. The proposed Antofagasta/Twin Metals mine at the edge of the Boundary Waters is a distinctly anti-American project designed to benefit Chilean billionaires and China.

    Environmental standards in place are inadequate to protect the Boundary Waters. The science documenting the permanent harm that upstream mining could cause has only become stronger since 2023. Two taconite mines (Peter Mitchell and the dormant Dunka) are currently polluting the Boundary Waters, even though both state and federal law establish an absolute non-degradation standard.

    The Trump administration is gutting the EPA’s Clean Water Act regulations to drastically reduce the authority of states and tribes to protect water quality. The MPCA wrote that the EPA’s rule changes would leave the state unable to address water-quality concerns in or near the Boundary Waters because of mining. Trump’s Interior Department has also radically changed procedures under the National Environmental Policy Act, dictating that environmental assessments be completed — start to finish — in 14 days with no public input and that environmental impact statements be completed in 28 days with a mere 10-day comment period. The Trump administration clearly has no intention of making science-based decisions to protect America’s public lands.

    The mining moratorium was an action to help protect the people and businesses of the Boundary Waters region. The only peer-reviewed and published economic study of the proposed Twin Metals project showed that the region would enjoy more jobs and income if no copper mining was allowed in the headwaters.

    The Boundary Waters is priceless and irreplaceable. We must permanently ban copper mining in its headwaters.

    https://www.duluthnewstribune.com/opinion/columns/in-response-boundary-waters-headwaters-too-vulnerable-for-copper-mining

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    US First Nation holds up project in Canada

    Trump reverses Minnesota mining ban

    Mining giant polluted Quebec waters for over a decade before $100M fine. What took so long?

    Don't Miss

    Iran war squeezes acid, aluminum, miners’ margins

    Global Policy 4 Mins Read

    The Iran war around the Strait of Hormuz is starting to hit miners far from…

    Kazatomprom sees room for all in nuclear revival

    Venezuelan crime boss’s demise creates opening for mining boost

    Rinehart’s $1B SpaceX bet targets mining beyond Earth

    Top Stories

    Non-melting alloy tech draws wide interest

    Electra sizes up U.S. nickel refinery

    Anger grows after China’s deadliest coal mining disaster in years

    Arctic Mine gains FAST-41 permitting status

    Our Picks

    Zambians pay price amid Copperbelt mining boom

    Zambia says privacy, minerals concerns stall US health aid deal

    Zambia mine regulator lifts suspension of operations at Mopani’s Mufulira mine

    Don't Miss

    Indigenous rights, the environment, and international law:

    Underground mining safety: why accidents persist and what technologies help

    Senate Republicans send Trump resolution to lift mining ban near Boundary Waters Canoe Area

    Weekly Newsletter

    Subscribe to our weekly Newsletter to keep up to date on the latest news in the metals, minerals and mining industry

    Copyright © 2025 - Metals Weekly. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.