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Environmentalists: MN Proposed Copper Mine at a Crossroads

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Monday, November 2, 2009   

MINNEAPOLIS - Four years in the making, the official Draft Environmental Impact Statement on the the first copper mine ever proposed for Minnesota has been released. The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is charged with determining how the proposed PolyMet copper mine could operate within state and federal environmental rules and regulations.

Opponents of the mine say sulfuric acid runoff, which occurs when sulfur-bearing rock is exposed to air and water, could damage waterways for centuries to come. Mary Marrow, staff attorney for the Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy, says the type of mining PolyMet Mining Inc. is proposing has caused major environmental disasters in other places. Because northern Minnesota is a water-rich area, she warns, the location of this mine couldn't be worse.

"We have - more than other places - an environment that is just ripe for the kind of environmental issues that this type of mine brings, more so than some mines in other parts of the world that are drier."

Asserting that the process will meet all standards and not harm the environment, PolyMet says 400 permanent jobs would be created at the facility.

Minnesotans can have their say about the PolyMet project and its potential impacts on northeastern Minnesota's clean water by submitting comments to the Department of Natural Resources. The final environmental statement is due in the second quarter of 2010.

Minnesotans are being asked to make serious decisions about the environmental future of the state, Marrow adds, because several other sulfide mining projects currently are in the exploration or development phase.

"I would encourage people to step back and think about the ups and downs, cycles of mining, what are the actual economic long-term benefits to this, and what are the environmental risks associated with that somewhat cyclical and unpredictable industry."

The Draft Environmental Impact Statement on the proposed open-pit copper-nickel PolyMet mine near Hoyt Lakes is available to the public online at www.dnr.state.mn.us.




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