Dasiqox.jpg

Dasiqox Headwaters in Tsilhqot’in Territory Threatened by Amarc Mine Exploration

This is a guest column by Russell Myers Ross, Chief of Yunesit’in Government, and lead organizer in the development of the Dasiqox Tribal Park, supported by the Friends of Nemaiah Valley.

Amarc Resources (TSX-V: AHR) will commence drilling this week at a site inside the Dasiqox Tribal Park in central British Columbia — despite not having the consent of the Tsilhqot’in Nation.

The drilling, located in a high-altitude, ecologically sensitive area, is scheduled to start without the consent of Xeni Gwet’in First Nation and Yunesit’in Government — two Tsilhqot’in First Nation communities that have launched a land-based project called “Nexwagwez?an,” meaning “There for us” in the Tsilhqot’in language. Nexwagwez?an, or the Dasiqox Tribal Park, was announced on Oct. 4, 2014, and consultation remains ongoing.

Amarc, a B.C.-based mineral exploration company, is focused on developing one site in particular for a copper mine. Amarc says the IKE site is located in “the heartland of the province’s producing porphyry copper mines.” 

It just so happens that this exploration site is also located at the Dasiqox headwaters — at the heart of the Tsilhqot’in’s traditional and ancestral territory. The IKE site’s glacial waterways feed into the Dasiqox (Taseko) salmon-bearing river.   

Landscape ecologist Sue Senger recently visited the IKE site with Xeni Gwet’in Chief Roger William and I and told us there is notable concern about sedimentation control disturbance at this high-altitude site. 

Further, the mountainous terrain in which 50 drill holes are proposed is a crucial stopover location for grizzly bears that use this area as a travel corridor between Toba inlet and Taseko and Chilko Lakes. Evidence of mule deer and marmots was also observed on the site visit in early August, as well as the presence of whitebark pine, which is a species protected under the Federal Species at Risk Act.

Chief Roger Williams

Roger William, Chief of Xeni Gwet'in, overseeing Amarc Resources IKE drilling site in August 2015.

My fellow chief, Roger William, says: "Right now our people will turn down anything to do with mining in what we consider to be a no-go zone, like the Dasiqox headwaters. Amarc came into our communities to present an exploration agreement. Our people have turned it down. Our communities are fatigued after going through two environmental assessments with Taseko Mines. There’s a huge trust issue."

Amarc Resources is a subsidiary of Hunter Dickinson Incorporated; Taseko Mines Limited is under the same umbrella of companies. Taseko Mines went through two federal environmental reviews that rejected the New Prosperity and Prosperity copper gold project.

Amarc Resources has already advertised that the IKE site has the potential of becoming a “Highland Valley” scale mine. Highland Valley is a large open-pit operation. It is unfathomable that a mine this size should operate at the top of one of the most important watersheds in the Tsilhqot’in.

Considering the significance of this area with respect to the watershed of the Taseko and its remote location, there will be incredible obstacles to move this project into a serious development. It is with good reason that our communities and leadership are erring on the side of caution and are committed to saying that this site will never become a mine.

As a leader, we are looking for partners in business that are willing to enter consensual relations, and we have entered relations with a few already to change the normative behavior to stronger partnerships.

Mining companies that only seek provincial approval and fail to respect our authority and land will have a much more difficult time, as Taseko Mines Ltd. encountered, and which Amarc Resources will experience. The company, if it chooses to be honest, ought to consider the IKE site as an impossible area for a full-scale mine and save everyone the time and money.

Main image: Drummers at the announcement of Dasiqox Tribal Park on October 4th, 2015.

We’ve got big plans for 2024
Seeking out climate solutions, big and small. Investigating the influence of oil and gas lobbyists. Holding leaders accountable for protecting the natural world.

The Narwhal’s reporting team is busy unearthing important environmental stories you won’t read about anywhere else in Canada. And we’ll publish it all without corporate backers, ads or a paywall.

How? Because of the support of a tiny fraction of readers like you who make our independent, investigative journalism free for all to read.

Will you join more than 6,000 members helping us pull off critical reporting this year?
We’ve got big plans for 2024
Seeking out climate solutions, big and small. Investigating the influence of oil and gas lobbyists. Holding leaders accountable for protecting the natural world.

The Narwhal’s reporting team is busy unearthing important environmental stories you won’t read about anywhere else in Canada. And we’ll publish it all without corporate backers, ads or a paywall.

How? Because of the support of a tiny fraction of readers like you who make our independent, investigative journalism free for all to read.

Will you join more than 6,000 members helping us pull off critical reporting this year?

A mineral rush and a hiring crisis: Canadian mining’s ‘dirty’ image is scaring off recruits

When Courtney Onstad was out in the field collecting samples and searching for gold, it wasn’t the thrill of the find she was after. What...

Continue reading

Recent Posts

Thousands of members make The Narwhal’s independent journalism possible. Will you help power our work in 2024?
Will you help power our journalism in 2024?
… which means our newsletter has become the most important way we connect with Narwhal readers like you. Will you join the nearly 90,000 subscribers getting a weekly dose of in-depth climate reporting?
A line chart in green font colour with the title "Our Facebook traffic has cratered." Chart shows about 750,000 users via Facebook in 2019, 1.2M users in 2020, 500,000 users in 2021, 250,000 users in 2022, 100,000 users in 2023.
… which means our newsletter has become the most important way we connect with Narwhal readers like you. Will you join the nearly 90,000 subscribers getting a weekly dose of in-depth climate reporting?
A line chart in green font colour with the title "Our Facebook traffic has cratered." Chart shows about 750,000 users via Facebook in 2019, 1.2M users in 2020, 500,000 users in 2021, 250,000 users in 2022, 100,000 users in 2023.
Overlay Image