More Precious Than Gold: Mineral Development and the Protection of Biological Diversity in Canada
Thursday, March 23, 2006
Across Canada, those seeking to protect biodiversity and those seeking mineral wealth have often ended up looking up the same valleys. Mineral development - from exploration to mine closure - poses some unique challenges and concern. This discussion paper lays out some of the primary issues and concerns related to mining in protected areas from a biodiversity-protection perspective. It provides an overview for those concerned about mining and environment conflicts, and raises questions about future directions. Prepared by the Environmental Mining Council of British Columbia for the World Wildlife Federation.
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| More Precious Than Gold: Mineral Development and the Protection of Biological Diversity in Canada | 1.89 MB |
Related Items
- Attempt to Revive Proposed Prosperity Mine Must End Now
- Tŝilhqot’in Determined to Fight “New” Prosperity Proposal
- Chieftain Metals’ Proposed Tulsequah Chief Mine Fraught with Risks and Uncertainties – New Report
- Federal Government’s Environmental Assessment Agenda Risks Public Health and Safety, Invites Environmental Disaster
- Troubled Waters: How Mine Waste Dumping is Poisoning Our Oceans, Rivers and Lakes
- Royalties, Environment and Citizens’ Rights: Survey Results Support Demands of Quebec Mining Reform Coalition





