Embattled Taseko Mine Permits Show Why B.C. Needs an Environmental Assessment Overhaul
By Gavin Smith, staff lawyer at West Coast Environmental Law Association. This piece first appeared in...
Canada is home to some of the world’s largest mining companies and major mining operations. The top five minerals mined in 2016 in Canada were gold, copper, potash, iron ore and coal. Mining contributed greatly to the economic development of Canada over the last century. However in more recent years the high environmental and social impacts of mining has cast the industry in a new light.
While scientific and public understanding of the impacts of mining has changed dramatically in recent years, regulations have been slow to keep pace. In B.C., the government has faced criticisms over its tailings ponds regulations in the wake of the 2014 Mount Polley mining disaster. First Nations have also called for reforms to gold rush-era laws that allow companies to stake claims without free, prior and informed Indigenous consent — one of the principles of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) that B.C. adopted in 2019.
For weekly updates on our reporting, sign up for The Narwhal’s newsletter.
By Gavin Smith, staff lawyer at West Coast Environmental Law Association. This piece first appeared in...
The Yukon’s giant Faro Mine was once the world’s largest open-pit lead and zinc mine....
In a surprise eleventh-hour move, Indigenous activist and former Chief of the Xat’sull First Nation,...
The Tulsequah Chief mine, a zinc and copper mine close to the Alaska border, has...
This week marks the three-year anniversary of the Mount Polley mine disaster, which sent 24...
Representatives from the Tsilhqot’in National Government were in the B.C. Supreme Court this week asking...
B.C.’s new Minister of Environment, George Heyman, says he identifies with the many British Columbians...
This is a guest post by Lisa Sammartino, the democracy campaigner for B.C.'s largest democracy...
As the three-year anniversary of the Mount Polley mine disaster approaches, so too does the...
“It’s like someone turned the fire switch on and it’s just not stopping.” That’s what wildfire ecologist Kira Hoffman told me in November, as we...
Continue reading