Friday, April 19, 2024

Dry Andes more sensitive to lithium mining than previously thought – study

US-based researchers conducted the widest-ever hydrological tracer analysis of the Dry Andes region in Chile, Argentina, and Bolivia 

By Mining.com Staff April 8, 2024 

Water in the Andes. Credit: David Boutt, University of Massachusetts Amherst

US-based researchers conducted the widest-ever hydrological tracer analysis of the Dry Andes region in Chile, Argentina, and Bolivia and found that the area is more sensitive than previously thought to activities such as mining, which may disrupt the presence, composition and flow of both surface and subsurface water.

In a paper published in the journal PLOS Water, the team explains that until now there has been no reliable, comprehensive understanding of exactly how the hydrological systems in extremely arid landscapes work, which means that environmental regulators don't have the information they need to best manage the mining industry and the transition to more environmentally sustainable future.

“We've been thinking about water all wrong,” Brendan Moran, the paper's lead author and a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, said in a media statement. “We typically assume that water is water, and manage all water the same way, but our research shows that there are actually two very distinct pieces of the water budget in the Dry Andes, and they respond very differently to environmental change and human usage.”

Water is crucial for lithium mining, which isn't often found in solid form and tends to occur in layers of volcanic ash—but it reacts quickly with water. When rain or snowmelt moves through the ash layers, lithium leaches into the groundwater, moving downhill until it settles in a flat basin where it remains in solution as a briny mix of water and lithium.

Because this brine is very dense, it often settles beneath pockets of fresh surface water, which float on top of the lithium-rich fluid below. These fresh and brackish lagoons and wetlands often become havens for unique and fragile ecosystems and iconic species such as flamingos, and they are also composed of different kinds of water. Thus, Moran and his co-authors developed a method to differentiate types of water apart.

The technique allows researchers to determine how old any given sample of water is and trace its interaction with the landscape by using 3H, or tritium, and the ratio between the oxygen isotope 18O and the hydrogen isotope 2H. Tritium occurs naturally in rainwater and decays at a predictable rate.

“This lets us get the relative age of the water,” Moran said. “Is it 'old,' as in, did it fall a century or more ago, or is it 'contemporary' water that fell a few weeks to years ago?”

The ratio between 18O and 2H additionally allowed the team to trace how much evaporation the water had been subject to.

“The 18O/2H ratio is like a specific fingerprint because different water sources—streams or lakes—will have different ratios. This lets us know where the water came from and how long it has been near the surface and out of the ground,” Moran noted.
Old and young water

Together with co-author David Boutt, the postdoc met with stakeholders in the Dry Andes to sample nearly every water source in the entire region—an unprecedented feat, given how inhospitable and sparsely inhabited the region is—and to measure their various isotopes.

Doing so allowed them to discover that old and young waters don't really mix and behave very differently.

“The deep, old groundwater sustains the hydrological system throughout the Dry Andes,” Boutt said. “Only 20%–40% of the water is contemporary surface water—but that's the water that is most sensitive to climate change, storm cycles and anthropogenic uses like mining. Scientists used to think that surface water was the most stable water because it was constantly being recharged by runoff but in extremely arid places like the Dry Andes, that isn't true. And the problem is, this new understanding of how water works hasn't been incorporated into any management system anywhere.”

In Moran's view, the implications of these findings are immediate, which means that it is urgent to protect the various conduits—streams, rivers, seeps, and so on—by which fresh, young rainwater flows into the lagoons and wetlands that are so environmentally critical. It also means that managers need to develop different methods for managing young and old waters; there is no one-size-fits-all approach that will work.

"What we see in the Dry Andes is representative of hydrology in all extremely arid regions—including the US West. It's not limited to lithium mining either,” Boutt pointed out.

THIS ARTICLE WAS ORIGINALLY POSTED ON MINING.COM,
BHP says first stage of Jansen mine almost halfway complete


Global miner BHP  revealed on Thursday that the first phase of its massive potash mine in Saskatchewan, Canada
 April 18, 2024

BHP’s first production at Jansen is expected in 2026. (Image courtesy of BHP.)

Global miner BHP (ASX: BHP) (NYSE: BHP) revealed on Thursday that the first phase of its massive potash mine in Saskatchewan, Canada, is ahead of schedule and near the halfway point of completion at 44%.

Located 140 km east of Saskatoon, the Jansen project is set to become one of the world's largest producers of potash, a commodity considered to be a pillar of future growth for the company. It also represents the single largest private economic investment in the province's history.

Since giving the project its go-ahead in 2021, BHP has been injecting capital to speed up its development even when potash prices were falling. Even before its approval, the group had spent US$4.5 billion on the project.

The proposed potash mine is being built in four stages, with US$5.7 billion already spent on the first stage alone. The aim, according to BHP, is to start Phase 1 production in late 2026, with expected potash production of 4.2 million tonnes a year.

In its quarterly update Thursday, the Australian mining group also said that the second stage, which was approved last year and is expected to cost another US$4.9 billion, will start in 2029. This will add another 4.4 million tonnes of annual production.

The entire four-phased development could have annual production of between 16-17 million tonnes, BHP previously stated.
EMP Metals throws switch on first Koch DLE pilot plant in Canada

EMP Metals has begun commissioning its direct lithium extraction (DLE) pilot plant in Estevan, Sask. 

By Marilyn Scales April 18, 2024

EMP is focused on the lithium potential of the Duperow formation in Saskatchewan. 
Credit: EMP Metals


EMP Metals (CSE: EMPS; OTCQB: EMPPF)has begun commissioning its direct lithium extraction (DLE) pilot plant in Estevan, Sask. This is the first Koch Technology Solutions DLE pilot skid in Canada.

EMP owns 75% of and operates the Viewfield lithium brine project in the Duperow formation. The project will produce 12,175 tonnes of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE) per year over an estimated life of 23 years. ROK Resources owns 25%.

"The commencement, commissioning, and continuous run time at the pilot facility is a substantial milestone for EMP Metals and ROK Resources,” said EMP COO Paul Schuh. “The data set we will collect over the next few months is expected to add significant value to our detailed engineering work for the initial stage 1 commercial facility located in southern Saskatchewan."

The operation of the pilot plant has been designed to closely resemble field operation conditions. The plant features pre-filtration and heater circuits designed by Saltworks Technologies to deliver brine at 60°C to the plant. The pilot plant will operate 24/7 over the next few months. Performance data will be collected and used to advance detailed engineering work on the stage 1 commercial facility.

EMP says the plant will treat brine averaging 185 mg/L at a rate of 4,500 L/d. This rate is lower than the planned commercial rate because the feed is of higher grade than it will be over the long-term. Combined, the total project contains approximately 338,843 tonnes of elemental lithium in-situ or 1.8 million tonnes of LCE.

Additional information is posted on www.EMPMetals.com.

Western Copper and Gold raising $29 million for Casino project in Yukon

Staff Writer | April 17, 2024 |

The Casino exploration camp in Yukon. Credit Cathie Archbould via Western Copper and Gold

Western Copper and Gold (TSX: WRN; NYSE: WRN) is making a C$40 million ($29m) upsized bought deal offer that will be spent at its Casino copper-gold-molybdenum project 150 km northwest of Carmacks and 300 km northwest of Whitehorse, Yukon.


The company has an arrangement with Eight Capital, on behalf of a syndicate of underwriters, who have collectively agreed to purchase approximately 21.1 million common shares of Western at a price of C$1.90 per share. The underwriters have been granted a 15% overallotment. The offer is expected to close about April 30, 2024.

The Casino property lies within the Whitehorse mining district and consists of 1,136 full and partial quartz claims and 55 placer claims acquired in accordance with the Yukon Quartz Mining Act. In mid 2019, Western Copper acquired the adjacent property to the west referred to as the Canadian Creek property.

Casino has resources suitable for milling and for leaching. The measured and indicated resource suitable for milling is 2.3 million tonnes grading 0.15% copper 0.18 g/t gold, 0.016% molybdenum and 1.4 g/t silver (0.31% copper equivalent). That equates to 7.4 million lb. of contained copper and 12.9 million oz. of gold.

The inferred resource for the mill is 1.3 million tonnes grading 0.10% copper, 0.14 g/t gold, 0.009% molybdenum and 1.1 g/t silver (0.21% copper equivalent).

Material suitable for heap leaching include 2.5 million tonnes in the measured and indicated category grading 0.14% copper, 0.18 g/t gold and 1.5 g/t silver (0.27 g/t gold equivalent), containing 7.6 million lb. of copper, 14.8 million oz. gold and 117.2 g/t silver. The leachable inferred resource is 1.4 million tonnes grading 0.10% copper, 0.14 g/t gold and 1.5 g/t silver.

A feasibility study was prepared in 2021 that considered an open pit a 120,000 t/d concentrator, and a 25,000 t/d heap leach facility.

The project lies within the Traditional Territory of the Selkirk First Nation (SFN). A small portion in the north of the project area also lies within the Traditional Territory of the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in. The Traditional Territory of Little Salmon Carmacks First Nation lies south of the project area.

The project is wholly within the asserted Traditional Territory of the White River First Nation, and upstream of the Kluane First Nation Traditional Territory.
MSHA issues final rule to better protect miners from silica dust exposure

Staff Writer | April 17, 2024 | 3:13 pm Careers Education Suppliers & Equipment USA Coal
Stock image.

The US Department of Labor announced Tuesday that its Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) has issued a final rule to better protect the nation’s miners from health hazards associated with exposure to respirable crystalline silica, also known as silica dust or quartz dust.


The final rule lowers the permissible exposure limit of respirable crystalline silica to 50 micrograms per cubic meter of air for a full-shift exposure, calculated as an 8-hour time-weighted average.

If a miner’s exposure exceeds the limit, the final rule requires mine operators to take immediate corrective actions to come into compliance.


“It is unconscionable that our nation’s miners have worked without adequate protection from silica dust despite it being a known health hazard for decades,” Acting Secretary Julie Su said in a media statement.

“Today, the Department of Labor has taken an important action to finally reduce miners’ exposure to toxic silica dust and protect them from suffering from preventable diseases,” she said.

The rule also requires mine operators to use engineering controls to prevent overexposures to silica dust and use dust samplings and environmental evaluations to monitor exposures.

It also compels metal and non-metal mine operators to establish medical surveillance programs to provide periodic health examinations at no cost to miners. The exams are similar to the medical surveillance programs available to coal miners under existing standards.

The final rule also replaces an outdated standard for respiratory protection with a new standard reflecting the latest advances in respiratory protection and practices. This update will better protect miners against airborne hazards, including silica dust, diesel particulate matter, asbestos and other contaminants.

Inhalation of respirable crystalline silica, a carcinogen, can cause serious lung and other diseases, such as silicosis, lung cancer, progressive massive fibrosis, chronic bronchitis and kidney disease.

Exposure to mixed coal mine dust containing respirable crystalline silica can lead to the development of black lung disease and progressive massive fibrosis. These diseases are irreversible and can be fatal. They are also preventable.

The rule will result in an estimated total of 1,067 lifetime avoided deaths and 3,746 lifetime avoided cases of silica-related illnesses, MSHA estimates.
Congo copper mine suspended amid radiation concerns

Bloomberg News | April 19, 2024 | 

Credit: La Compagnie Minière de Musonoie

Operations at a Zijin Mining Group Ltd. copper and cobalt mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo have been suspended due to worries about excessive radiation in its cobalt, according to people familiar with the matter.


The La Compagnie Minière de Musonoie project, known as COMMUS, has been closed since earlier this week, the people said, asking not to be identified because they aren’t authorized to speak on the matter.

Government officials present at COMMUS are overseeing the suspension of production and testing cobalt shipments that were blocked and returned after being exported, the people said. Congo has some deposits of uranium in its southeastern Katanga region and some contamination occurs occasionally.

Cobalt is mined as a byproduct of copper production and the COMMUS mine produced 129,000 tons of copper last year, about 4.2% of total output in the world’s second largest source of the metal. It also produced 2,200 tons of cobalt last year.

The shutdown at the project comes during a period of supply disruption in the global copper market, driven by the surprise closure of First Quantum Minerals Ltd.’s giant Cobre Panama mine. Anglo American Plc also downgraded production guidance and Codelco has seen output slump to quarter century lows.

China’s Zijin owns 72% of COMMUS and the project is in the mining hub of Kolwezi in Lualaba province. The state-owned Gecamines controls the balance. Zijin also holds an interest in Congo’s largest copper project, Ivanhoe Mines Ltd.’s Kamoa-Kakula.

Zijin, Congo’s Mines Minister Antoinette N’Samba Kalambayi and Lualaba’s Mining Minister Jacques Kaumba didn’t respond to requests for comment. Gecamines declined to comment.

(By William Clowes and Michael J. Kavanagh)
Panama election unlikely to shift outlook for First Quantum’s copper mine

Reuters | April 18, 2024 | 

Demonstrations against the contract have turned into an anti-government, end-to-all-mining movement. (Image: Screenshot of stock video.)

Prospects are poor for First Quantum Minerals to recover its canceled concession for a lucrative copper mine after presidential elections in May, a Reuters review of the campaigns’ proposals and interviews with protest leaders show.


Protests against First Quantum’s concession demanding greater environmental guarantees and transparency in negotiations made authorities not only annul its contract to operate one of the world’s largest and newest copper mines but ban all new metal mining permits last year.

Metal traders and investors are closely watching the election outcome to see if a new president could help revive mining in Panama.

Eight candidates are set to appear on the May 5 ballot, with polls showing a tight race. Among the five frontrunners, three have vowed to continue with the plans to close the Cobre Panama mine, one has pledged a referendum on the matter and another has not formally indicated his intentions.

The Canadian miner lost nearly half of its market value after it was stripped of its contract and in March global rating agency Fitch downgraded Panama’s sovereign bonds to speculative grade, citing fiscal and governance challenges aggravated by the mine’s closure.


Asked about its expectations for the mine after the vote, a spokesperson for First Quantum said only: “As in any jurisdiction we operate in, we look forward to seeing the process of democracy deliver the candidate of Panama’s choice in a fair, transparent and peaceful election.”

Reuters spoke to leaders from five different protesters’ groups. Three groups, including the country’s main workers’ union SUNTRACS, said there was no scenario under which they would let authorities seal a new partnership with First Quantum.

“People already showed on the streets they don’t want metal mining,” Saul Mendez, head of SUNTRACS, said.

Two groups said they would support a referendum on the matter, and predicted the result would be against mining. A survey published by local newspaper La Prensa in February showed 90% of Panamanians oppose mining.

All five groups expressed their distrust towards candidates, even the ones who have outright opposed mining, saying that politicians do not tend to fulfill their promises.

“If the incoming president opens that mine without authorization from the whole country, of course we’re going back to the streets and to the sea,” Sabino Ayarza, a representative of the fishing flotilla that halted First Quantum’s operations by blocking its main port, told Reuters.

“And we’re going with other thoughts. We are no longer going passively as before, but aggressively to close that.”

Reuters also spoke to six legal experts in Panama who said that while local laws could technically allow First Quantum’s prospects to change in a matter of months, a referendum or another type of consultation to ensure public support would be the only way to achieve that politically.

First Quantum said in February it was seeking $20 billion through international arbitration over Panama’s order to close the mine. The miner has filed for two arbitration proceedings, one under the Canada-Panama Free Trade Agreement, and another linked to the arbitration clause on the canceled contract. The clause provides for proceedings in Miami, according to the company.

Panama’s deputy finance minister told Reuters days after the announcement that the country is ready to defend its interests in the legal battle against First Quantum, adding the state will prove to courts it respects foreign investment.

Renzo Merino from Moody’s sovereign team said Panama’s economy was already doing well before the mine began to extract copper. “Panama hasn’t lost that. It still has the potential,” he said, while warning a recovery could be slow if investor concerns spread to other sectors and the country is forced to pay compensation in arbitration.
Presidential frontrunners

Mining has not been a big campaign issue.

Among the five frontrunners, Jose Raul Mulino, who is leading the latest polls, does not mention mining in his government plan and he has not attended any presidential debates.

Former President and candidate Martin Torrijos, who has been among the top three candidates in many polls, does not mention intentions for mining in his government plan, though he told Reuters at a campaign event that the closure of the mine is a decision Panamanians already took and he plans to follow.

Romulo Roux vowed in his plan to press ahead with closing the mine, but did not mention anything about the future of mining. He was not available for an interview but his running mate, Jose Blandon, told Reuters at an event that his team has no plans to overturn the mining ban.

Current vice president and presidential candidate Jose Gabriel Carrizo’s proposal for the country calls for a public vote for Panamanians to decide on the future of mining.

The campaigns of candidates Mulino, Roux, and Carrizo did not make them available for interview for this story.

Panama’s ban on new metal mining concessions pushed up copper prices due to fears about supply. Any hint of a shift in Panama could again move markets.

Candidate Ricardo Lombana, who has been moving between second and fourth place in the latest polls, went further in his government plan by proposing to change the constitution to ban mining outright.

“No economic impact is above the constitutional mandate and the sovereign will. The whole country knows that the concession contract is illegal and that its closure must be consummated,” Lombana told Reuters.

(By Valentine Hilaire, Elida Moreno and Divya Rajagopal; Editing by Denny Thomas and Claudia Parsons)

Rio Tinto, Saudi Arabia vying for First Quantum mines stake

Bloomberg News | April 18, 2024 | 

First Quantum’s 80%-owned Kansanshi mine in Zambia is Africa’s largest copper operation. (Image courtesy of Liam Richer | YouTube)

Rio Tinto Group and Saudi Arabia’s state-backed Manara Minerals Investment Co. are among suitors considering bids for a stake in First Quantum Minerals Ltd.’s Zambian copper mines, according to people familiar with the matter.


Japanese trading houses Mitsui & Co. and Sumitomo Corp. have also been studying the assets, the people said, asking not to be identified as the talks are private. First Quantum is open to selling as much as 30% in its mines in Zambia, depending on the offers it receives, and is seeking first-round bids in the coming weeks, they said.

The Sentinel and Kansanshi mines could also attract interest from Chinese companies such as Zijin Mining Group Co. and Jiangxi Copper Co., which is First Quantum’s second-biggest shareholder, the people said. The process is in the early stages and there’s no certainty the parties will proceed with bids.

Shares of First Quantum rose as much as 6.9% to C$15.80 in Toronto after Bloomberg reported interest in the Zambian mines stake.

Zambia accounted for about half of First Quantum’s copper output and revenue last year, and delivered more than $450 million in operating profit.


First Quantum is selling a stake in its Zambian assets after it was ordered to close its flagship copper mine in Panama last year following public protests. That left the company scrambling to refinance the debt it took on to build the mine. The firm sold about $1 billion in stock and raised $1.6 billion from a notes offering this year and has said it may look at divesting smaller mining assets.

A spokesperson for Sumitomo said that the company continues to explore opportunities to acquire stakes in copper operations, declining to comment on specific deals. Spokespeople for First Quantum, Rio, Mitsui and Jiangxi Copper declined to comment. Representatives for Manara and Zijin Mining couldn’t immediately be reached.

The copper mines are attracting interest from a range of investors because demand for the metal is expected to soar in coming years. Copper is crucial for the production of electric vehicles and renewable energy infrastructure, while there is a lack of new mines being built.

And there are also relatively few good assets to buy. Some of the mines available in the central African copper belt, which stretches through Zambia and the Democratic Republic of Congo, aren’t appealing to buyers, and major firms are unwilling to sell stakes in their most important developments.

That means companies that have previously avoided taking stakes in mines in Africa — such as Japanese trading houses — have started to become more open to the possibility.

Rio, the world’s second-largest mining company, is generally reluctant to be a non-operator and has also avoided the central Africa region. The company’s copper head said at a recent conference that he sees much more value in building mines rather than buying existing assets. Still, the company has some ties with First Quantum and sold it a majority stake in a development project in Peru last year.

For Saudi Arabia, the deal would be another major coup following its purchase of a stake in Vale SA’s base metals unit for $2.6 billion. The kingdom is looking to secure supplies of metals for its industrial ambitions as it attempts to diversify its economy away from oil.

(By Dinesh Nair, Vinicy Chan and Thomas Biesheuvel)
Glencore and Trafigura’s sanctions games are draining the LME

Bloomberg News | April 19, 2024 | 

LME warehouse. Credit: Steinweg Group

The world’s two biggest metals traders are moving to withdraw large volumes of aluminum from the London Metal Exchange in a complex trade made possible by new UK sanctions on Russian metal, raising questions about unintended consequences from the new rules.


Trafigura Group and Glencore Plc plan to withdraw the metal to profit from a new multi-tiered system created by the sanctions, according to people familiar with the matter. The trade involves ordering out Russian metal and then re-registering it on the LME under a new, less-desirable category, while striking profit-sharing deals with warehouses to receive a sliver of the rent paid by future owners for as long as it sits there. (The longer it sits, the more money they stand to make.)

Nearly $400 million of aluminum was requested for withdrawal this week from warehouses in South Korea and Malaysia, according to LME data, driving live inventories in the warehouse system close to a record low. Trafigura and Glencore have both been behind orders for withdrawal of aluminum this week, according to people familiar with the matter.

The play, which has captured the attention of the global metals world, raises questions about whether the UK government was aware of the opportunities it was creating for traders to game a complex set of rules imposed by the sanctions last week.

The nature of the trade means that the metal will ultimately be placed back on the LME. But the restrictions have added new layers of paperwork and approvals as traders must prove the provenance of the metal they are registering, which is likely to slow down the process and keep LME inventories lower for longer.



The US and UK last Friday announced a ban on deliveries to the LME and Chicago Mercantile Exchange of any Russian aluminum, copper and nickel produced after April 12. The restrictions are aimed at driving down demand and prices for Russian supplies, while seeking to avoid wider disruptions by allowing its miners to keep selling to non-US and -UK buyers outside of the LME.

Still, LME prices for all three metals have risen sharply this week, with aluminum up 7% and copper closing in on $9,900 a ton for the first time since mid-2022.

Gaming warehousing rules has long been a central part of many traders’ strategy, especially in the aluminum market, and the past week’s moves are unlikely to have a meaningful impact on the wider question of whether the sanctions will be successful at reducing Russia’s revenue from selling metals.

The key for the trade being pursued by Glencore and Trafigura is that the UK has allowed existing stocks of Russian metal to continue to be traded on the LME. However, this “old” Russian metal will be treated differently if it was already stored in LME warehouses when the sanctions came into effect.

By withdrawing and re-registering the metal under a different category, the traders would reduce the pool of potential owners and make it more likely that it remains sitting in the same LME warehouse for an extended period of time — all the while generating profit for them thanks to the practice of “rent sharing.”

Spokespeople for Glencore and Trafigura declined to comment.

The growing percentage of Russian stocks on the LME has already been a controversial subject since the invasion of Ukraine, and the share had increased further in recent months — to more than 90% for aluminum.



One significant risk to the trade is that either the LME or the UK government move to change the rules and so to undercut it. The UK Treasury is keeping the trade license — which created the dual categories of Russian metal — under review as it monitors trade flows and trade practices, according to a person familiar with its thinking.

The LME has said since the sanctions were announced that it is prepared to take further action on Russian metal if there are developments that threaten market orderliness.

“The LME continues to monitor the market closely and remains ready to take further action should that be required, including in relation to adverse market behaviors as a result of the introduction of the recent sanctions,” a spokesperson said.

For the exchange and the broader aluminum market, the immediate consequence of the withdrawals is that the volume of stock that’s readily available to other buyers has fallen to critically low levels.

Live aluminum inventories stand at 171,200 tons, nearing a record low struck in 2022, and traders expect that there will be further requests to withdraw metal in the coming days.

With spot prices trading at steep premiums to futures this week, there’s a growing focus on how long it will take for the metal that Glencore and Trafigura are withdrawing to re-enter the LME system, given that the LME will need to manually approve the applications and confirm that they are compliant with the new rules.

(By Mark Burton and Jack Farchy)
US restricts drilling and mining in Alaska wilderness, angering (GOP) state leaders

Reuters | April 19, 2024 | 

National Petroleum Reserve Alaska. Credit: BLM

The Biden administration on Friday took steps to limit both oil and gas drilling and mining in Alaska, angering state officials who said the restrictions will cost jobs and make the US reliant on foreign resources, but pleasing environmentalists.


The measures are aligned with President Joe Biden’s efforts to rein in oil and gas activities on public lands and conserve 30% of US lands and waters to combat climate change.

The Interior Department finalized a regulation to block oil and gas development on 40% of Alaska’s National Petroleum Preserve to protect habitats for polar bears, caribou and other wildlife and the way of life of indigenous communities.

The agency also said it would reject a proposal by a state agency to construct a 211-mile (340-km) road intended to enable mine development in the Ambler Mining District in north central Alaska.

The agency cited risks to caribou and fish populations that dozens of native communities rely on for subsistence.

“I am proud that my Administration is taking action to conserve more than 13 million acres in the Western Arctic and to honor the culture, history, and enduring wisdom of Alaska Natives who have lived on and stewarded these lands since time immemorial,” Biden said in a statement.

The NPR-A, as it is known, is a 23 million-acre (93 million hectare) area on the state’s North Slope that is the largest tract of undisturbed public land in the United States. The new rule would prohibit oil and gas leasing on 10.6 million acres (4.3 million hectares) while limiting development on more than 2 million additional acres (809,000 hectares).

The rule would not affect existing oil and gas operations, including ConocoPhillips’ $8 billion Willow project, which the Biden administration approved last year.

Currently, oil and gas leases cover about 2.5 million acres (1 hectare).

The Ambler Access Project, proposed by the Alaska Industrial and Development Export Authority, would enable mine development in an area with copper, zinc and lead deposits and create jobs, the authority has said.

Interior’s Bureau of Land Management released its environmental analysis of the project on Friday, recommending “no action” as its preferred alternative. The project now faces a final decision by the Interior Department.

Republican senators from Alaska and several other states held a press conference on Thursday to slam the administration’s widely anticipated decisions.

“When you take off access to our resources, when you say you cannot drill, you cannot produce, you cannot explore, you cannot move it — this is the energy insecurity that we’re talking about,” Senator Lisa Murkowski said. “We’re still going to need the germanium, the gallium, the copper. We’re still going to need the oil. But we’re just not going to get it from Alaska.”

Environmentalists, an important part of Biden’s base ahead of the Nov. 5 US elections, praised the moves for protecting habitats and cultural resources at a time of change in the region.

“As the Arctic undergoes dramatic climatic changes, this new rule (on NPR-A) is absolutely necessary to protect birds, caribou, and fish,” said David Krause, interim executive director at Audubon Alaska.

(By Nichola Groom and Timothy Gardner; Editing by Leslie Adler)

 

Ontario Shipyards Shuts Down its Thunder Bay Facility

Thunder Bay
Fabmar Thunder Bay (file image courtesy Ontario Shipyards)

PUBLISHED APR 17, 2024 4:32 PM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE

 

Canadian firm Ontario Shipyards has decided to shutter its plant at Thunder Bay, citing a shortage of workers and a slow market. 

In 2020, Ontario Shipyards (then known as Heddle Shipyards) entered an agreement with Vancouver shipbuilder Seaspan to construct blocks for the future two-ship Polar Icebreaker program, part of Canada's National Shipbuilding Strategy (NSS). The following year, Heddle bought a yard in Thunder Bay - Fabmar Metals - and equipped it for building ship modules. 

Because of delays at Seaspan, the Canadian government reopened the NSS to a new round of shipyard bids, intending to bring in more capacity to build the icebreaker program. It selected Quebec's Davie Shipyards to join the effort, and it awarded one polar icebreaker to Seaspan and one polar icebreaker to Davie. Seaspan has been progressing with R&D operations to support its side of the project, including building a test block, and it plans to begin building the first production block this year. 

The impact of the divided icebreaker contract on Ontario Shipyards is unclear, but Ontario has decided to mothball its facility at Thunder Bay. The site remains fully equipped and ready to turn on again at a moment's notice, but 15 workers were laid off, according to local media. 

Ontario Shipyards also operates two other locations in Port Weller and Hamilton, Ontario. It has invested heavily in equipment and workforce training at these sites, and they remain open.