All emissions from Faro mine cleanup must be offset, review board says

Project could increase territory’s total emissions by upward of 46 per cent, undermining plans to reduce them

Julien Gignac, CBC News

While the cleanup of the abandoned Faro mine could release a "carbon bomb," the project may move ahead but on the condition emissions are offset, according to a new report from the Yukon Environmental and Socio-economic Assessment Board.

And not just some emissions. All of them.

But how?

Source
CBC News

Canada Turns Its Back on Mining Tragedy in Turkey

Submitted by Jamie on

On February 13, 2024, at SSR Mining’s Çöpler gold mine in Turkey’s eastern Erzincan province, the hill that the mine’s heap leach pad was built on collapsed, taking with it an estimated 10 million tonnes of cyanide-laced ore, burying nine mineworkers alive and pouring into the valley below and towards the Euphrates River.

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Putting an End to Free Mining | 100 signatures on letter in support of Mitchikanibikok Inik First Nation's legal action

Montreal – One hundred (100) Indigenous people, academics, and representatives of civil society published an open letter today in support of the Mitchikanibikok Inik First Nation in its challenge to Quebec's Mining Act.

Source
MiningWatch Canada – Coalition Québec meilleure mine
Key Issues

Over 100 International Organizations Denounce Belo Sun’s Efforts to Criminalize Brazilian Land Defenders

The Canadian mining company Belo Sun is attempting to build the Volta Grande gold mine which, if built, would be the largest open-pit gold mine in Brazil. Instead of responding to legitimate concerns about the environmental and human rights impacts of the project, the company has filed a criminal lawsuit against local community members and activists who are speaking out.

Source
MiningWatch Canada

MiningWatch’s Viviana Herrera Testifies Before Canada’s International Trade Committee on a Possible Ecuador-Canada Free Trade Agreement

Submitted by Viviana on
Special Blog Type

On February 13, MiningWatch Canada’s Latin America Program Coordinator Viviana Herrera, alongside Amnesty International Canada and the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, testified before the House of Commons’ Standing Committee on International Trade as part of its study of free trade negotiations between Canada and Ecuador.

Human-rights groups decry rising trend of corporate SLAPP lawsuits

Geoffrey York and Tavia Grant, The Globe and Mail

When a Canadian mining company filed a lawsuit against a small African human-rights group, the company said it was merely seeking to get errors corrected. The African group disagreed, calling the suit an attempt to bully and silence it.

...

Source
The Globe and Mail

It's never been more important to find a mining waste fix

Late January marked the fifth anniversary of the world's worst modern-day tailings dam disaster at an iron ore mine in Brumadinho, Brazil. The collapse killed at least 270 people. They were mostly Vale company employees eating lunch in a canteen directly below a dam that gave way, sending a tidal wave of 12 million cubic metres of toxic orange sludge eight kilometres downstream, bulldozing houses, offices and people.

Source
Canada's National Observer

Canada Joins Peru’s President in Mining Push

Submitted by Viviana on
Special Blog Type
It’s been barely a year since Dina Boluarte assumed the presidency in Peru, but she is wasting no time making big changes to attract foreign investment and guarantee the expansion of industrial mining across the country. Following the impeachment and arrest of former President Pedro Castillo on December 7, 2022, Boluarte—who was then serving as vice president—took the top job, even as widespread protests called for her resignation and a new general election.
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