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By: Terry Macalister
Thursday April 17 2008
A wave of protests will hit the annual meetings of BP and Rio Tinto in London today as human rights and environmental campaigners voice their concerns at the activities of the extractive industries.
Shareholders at Anglo American on Tuesday were met with similar complaints, while Shell investors will also face protestors at its meeting next month.
Richard Solly, secretary of the London Mining Network, a coalition of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) coordinating the protests said: "The UK government must ensure that our businesses do not profit at the expense of the suffering and environmental destruction of communities around the world."
Campaigners dressed as pirates will greet investors going to the BP annual meeting. Their costumes symbolise the company's attempt to "rob" Iraq of its oil through pressing the Baghdad administration to sign a new oil law that could see BP negotiating to develop Rumaila, Iraq's largest producing field.
Activist shareholders plan to question new chief executive, Tony Hayward, on BP's plans in the face of what they claim is opposition from two in three Iraqis, according to a poll released earlier by NGOs in Britain and America.
Ruth Tanner, senior campaigns officer at charity War on Want, said: "Iraq needs control over its resources to improve living standards for millions of people hit by war and occupation. To most Iraqis the name BP will mean brazen pirates unless the company stops trying to plunder their country's oil."
The British government has been using its position as a military occupation power to push the interests of oil companies in Iraq, according to London research group Platform. It obtained documents through the Freedom of Information Act which, it claims, reveal extensive efforts since 2004 to push for companies such as BP and Shell to receive long-term contracts, giving them exclusive rights to exploit Iraq's huge oil fields.
Tribal and community representatives from around the world will address Rio Tinto's annual meeting and argue that the mining group's claim that its operations are sustainable and fair is far from the truth. Benny Wenda, chairman of the Koteka Tribal Assembly and representative of the West Papuan independence movement, has been brought to London by the London Mining Network. "Rio Tinto promised they would bring wealth, health and education for my people, but they are paying the Indonesian military that kills my people. They have filled our rivers with pollution and they have destroyed our sacred mountain: their promises are worth nothing to West Papuans."
Oil companies have also been under fire from NGOs over biofuels. Forecourt suppliers have been under new legislative pressure from Tuesday to provide 2.5% of all diesel and petrol from crop-based sources to reduce carbon pollution.
Rachel Smolker, a campaigner with the Global Forest Coalition said: "The UK has chosen to ignore a vast mountain of evidence that biofuels are contributing to hunger, climate change, deforestation and human rights abuses."
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LONDON, ENGLAND - Four community leaders took their opposition to the proposed Upper Peninsula sulfide mine to the United Kingdom today when each spoke at the annual meeting of London-based Rio Tinto, the mining giant and parent company of Kennecott Eagle Minerals Co.
Before a gathering of thousands, Susan LaFernier, vice president of the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community, was joined by Cynthia Pryor, Yellow Dog Watershed Preserve; Fran Whitman, Friends of the Land of Keweenaw; and Gabriel Caplett, Northwoods Wilderness Recovery. Each possesses either a share of stock or a proxy allowing them a voice at the meeting.
“We hope to bring an understanding to the Rio Tinto board of directors and shareholders that the citizens of our region and across the state of Michigan do not support their sulfide mining venture on the Yellow Dog Plains,” Pryor explained in an interview just days before the meeting. “We will present them with every citizen and group resolution or petition signed in opposition to this mine.”
In her presentation, LaFernier will explain the tribe’s sense of responsibility for human health, air, water, land and cultural resources, including Eagle Rock, a location of spiritual importance to Native Americans in the region.
“I will inform the Rio Tinto board about our rights as written in the 1842 and 1854 treaties with the United States. These are rights we have always had as first owners of the land,” the tribal official explained. KBIC has opposed the mine since 2004, when the Tribal Council adopted a resolution in opposition to the project.
“The Rio Tinto board should understand that the opposition is not a few radicals, as they have been led to believe, but a large and well-organized coalition involving thousands of people across the state,” Pryor said.
Caplett says the scope of Kennecott’s plans for the Upper Peninsula demands action. "Rio Tinto has multiple projects planned for our water-rich area. These projects would affect the Great Lakes, which contains roughly one-fourth of the world's freshwater. Other companies are planning metallic mineral projects, as well as uranium operations, and are encouraged by weak new mining laws that were heavily influenced by Rio Tinto's agenda."
The message of the Upper Peninsula foursome wasn’t the only one heard in opposition to Rio Tinto projects throughout the world. Activists from Argentina and West Papua also appealed to shareholders to take a closer look at projects in their respective countries.
Following the Rio Tinto annual meeting, LaFernier spoke on behalf of the group at a public meeting hosted by Amnesty International UK’s Human Rights Centre.
April 17, 2008 – 12:13 pm
The environment in the Upper Peninsula recently received a boost when Save the Wild UP was awarded a grant from Freshwater Future (formerly great Lakes Aquatic Habitat Network and Fund). The $3,500 grant was awarded to help protect the Upper Peninsula from major risks to the health of some of the Great Lakes region’s most precious groundwater and surface water habitats. This project will research the legal mechanisms landowners can utilize to control mining exploration or mining activity under their surface land ownership, as well as protect habitat. Results will be used to help educate the public on mineral rights ownership and their role in protecting aquatic ecosystems.
Freshwater Future builds effective community-based citizen action to protect and restore the water quality of the Great Lakes basin. They work towards this goal by providing financial assistance, communications and networking assistance, and technical assistance to citizens and grassroots watershed groups throughout the Great Lakes basin. Grassroots organizations and citizen initiatives in both the U.S. and Canada are eligible for funding in the two annual funding cycles.
“With so many great proposals for important work throughout the Great Lakes region, the decision making process was difficult as always,” said Jill Ryan, Executive Director of Freshwater Future. “The 20 applications we reviewed presented unique and thoughtful ways to engage local communities in protecting local rivers, lakes, and wetlands. Save the Wild UP was one of just 10 that received funding in this grant cycle,” said Ryan.
SWUP’s mission is to protect Michigan’s Upper Peninsula from unsustainable development, environmental degradation, and dangerous contamination through public awareness and education. The grant from Freshwater Future will help accomplish this mission by helping to protect headwaters habitats in the Lake Superior and Lake Michigan watersheds from the risks of alteration and contamination by nonferrous metallic mining, particularly sulfide mining processes.
If you would like more information on this project, contact Save the Wild UP, 906-228-4444.
MARQUETTE — The Marquette County Board expressed support and encouragement for Kennecott Mineral Company’s plans to reuse the abandoned Humboldt mill.
Kennecott would use the facility to refine rock from its proposed Eagle Project mine on the Yellow Dog Plains.
While the county board has not gone on record specifically supporting the Eagle Project, it has officially given its backing to mining operations that comply with state and federal laws and regulations.
During its regular meeting Tuesday night, board Chairman Gerry Corkin read a letter addressed to Eagle Project Manager Jon Cherry stating the county’s support for the Humboldt project.
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Coaster Brook Trout
Action: Comment on listing the Coaster Brook Trout on the Endangered Species List
Comments must be submitted by May 19, 2008
Directions: The US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) has made a finding that the petition to list the coaster brook trout as an endangered species does in fact present substantial information warranting consideration. Based on the finding, the USFWS is in the process of reviewing the status of the coasters. Please contact the USFWS to share your information on the coasters to ensure that the status review is complete. We strongly encourage you to write and mail your own letter. However, click here if you would like to submit comments electronically.
Please note: if you do submit comments, the USFWS will post the comments on their website, including your address.
Talking Points
~ Thank USFWS for the positive finding, and let them know we appreciate their work to restore coasters.
~ Coasters are an emblematic species for the Lake Superior community and we would like to see them return.
~States, tribes, and organizations have been engaged in activities to help restore the coaster brook trout for several years. The restoration activities have not been enough, as coaster populations remain small and unstable.
~ Kennecott's proposed Eagle Project is likely to destroy, modify, or curtail the habitat of the coasters.
~ Siltation from road crossings, traffic, logging, etc. is one of the primary causes of habitat degradation. If you have personally observed washouts or other siltation problems in UP streams, please describe this in your comments.
Note: you must include your address for your comments to be considered
Please submit written comments to the address below or Click here to submit comments electronically and to read more about the listing of the coasters
ATTN: FWS–R3–ES–2008–0030
Division of Policy and Directives Management
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
4401 N. Fairfax Drive, Suite 222
Arlington, VA 22203
| Lobby ID#: |
009093 |
| Registrant's Name: |
KENNECOTT MINERALS COMPANY |
| Lobby Type: |
Lobbyist |
| Date Became Lobbyist/Agent: |
02/10/2004 |
Signatory/In Care Of:
Mailing Address:Phone: |
DAVID J SALISBURY
224 NORTH 2200 WEST
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84116
(801) 238-2400 |
| Residential Address:Phone: |
224 NORTH 2200 WEST
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84116 |
| Business Address:Phone: |
224 NORTH 2200 WEST
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84116
(801) 238-2400 |
For Lobbying purposes in the State of Michigan,
KENNECOTT MINERALS COMPANY has hired:
Employee
ID# |
Employee Name/Address |
Yr-Cycle
Added |
Yr-Cycle
Deleted |
Active
Date |
Term
Date |
| A 009099 |
BROWN, JUDITH
26877 TOURNEY RD
VALENCIAI, CA 91355
(661) 287-5724 |
2004-S |
2004-S |
02/16/2004 |
06/16/2004 |
| A 009091 |
CHERRY, JONATHAN C
1004 HARBOR HILLS DR STE 103
MARQUETTE, MI 49855
(906) 225-5791 |
2004-S |
|
02/10/2004 |
|
| A 009092 |
CONONELOS, LOUIE
8309 W 3595 SOUTH PO BOX 6001 %KENNECOTT
MAGNA, UT 84044-6001
(801) 685-4537 |
2004-S |
|
02/10/2004 |
|
| A 009090 |
FOX, FREDERICK D
224 NORTH 2200 WEST
SALT LAKE, UT 84116
(801) 238-2400 |
2004-S |
|
02/10/2004 |
|
| A 000027 |
GOVERNMENTAL CONSULTANT SERVICES
120 N WASHINGTON SQ STE 110
LANSING, MI 48933
(517) 484-6216 |
2004-S |
|
10/13/1983 |
|
| A 009089 |
JACKMAN, ADRIAN
224 NORTH 2200 WEST
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84116
(801) 238-2400 |
2004-S |
2006-S |
02/10/2004 |
08/01/2006 |
| A 009962 |
SALISBURY, DAVID J
224 NORTH 2200 WEST %KENNECOTT MINERALS CO
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84116
(801) 238-2480 |
2006-S |
|
09/01/2006 |
|
Click here for more information
Financial Information for KENNECOTT MINERALS COMPANY
is available from the following financial reports:
| Financial Report |
Food and Beverage Expense |
Mailing and Advertising Expense |
All Other Lobbying Expense |
Total Expense YTD |
| 2007 WINTER FINANCIAL REPORT |
$.00 |
$.00 |
$8,178.00 |
$8,178.00 |
| 2007 SUMMER FINANCIAL REPORT |
$.00 |
$.00 |
$9,790.20 |
$9,790.20 |
| Total Lobbying Expenditures for 2007 |
$.00 |
$.00 |
$17,968.20 |
$17,968.20 |
| 2006 WINTER FINANCIAL REPORT |
$.00 |
$.00 |
$7,821.00 |
$7,821.00 |
| 2006 SUMMER FINANCIAL REPORT |
$.00 |
$.00 |
$9,777.60 |
$9,777.60 |
| Total Lobbying Expenditures for 2006 |
$.00 |
$.00 |
$17,598.60 |
$17,598.60 |
| 2005 WINTER FINANCIAL REPORT |
$.00 |
$.00 |
$6,522.00 |
$6,522.00 |
| 2005 SUMMER FINANCIAL REPORT |
$.00 |
$.00 |
$9,030.00 |
$9,030.00 |
| Total Lobbying Expenditures for 2005 |
$.00 |
$.00 |
$15,552.00 |
$15,552.00 |
| 2004 WINTER FINANCIAL REPORT |
$.00 |
$.00 |
$8,305.00 |
$8,305.00 |
| 2004 SUMMER FINANCIAL REPORT |
$.00 |
$.00 |
$12,542.00 |
$12,542.00 |
| Total Lobbying Expenditures for 2004 |
$.00 |
$.00 |
$20,847.00 |
$20,847.00 |
| Total Lobbying Expenditures in database |
$.00 |
$.00 |
$71,965.80 |
$71,965.80 |
Racing the devil: Kennecott kept quiet while fixing dangerous dam
Tribune Editorial
Article Last Updated: 03/27/2008 05:22:27 PM MDT
Store a mountain of mine tailings behind an earthen embankment that hovers over homes. Saturate with water, trapped by an impermeable base. Shake vigorously in an earthquake until the sopping wet waste liquefies - think milkshake - and exerts tremendous pressure on the base of the dam. And then run, really fast.
What you have is a recipe for disaster. If the dam breaks, it will unleash an avalanche of viscous mine sludge that consumes everything in its path.
That's the scenario that residents of Green Meadows Estates, an enclave of more than 200 homes on the outskirts of Magna, unknowingly and unnecessarily faced for years, thanks to collusion between a cold, callous, calculating company, and an uncaring and seemingly incompetent state agency.
Kennecott Utah Copper Corp., according to a confidential self-investigation conducted by the company in 1997 and obtained by The Salt Lake Tribune, became aware of the danger posed by its tailings pond as early as 1957 in a report issued by Arthur Casarande, known as the "father of soil mechanics." Subsequent reports commissioned by the company in 1966, 1974 and 1983 also raised the potential of dam failure, and the susceptibility of the mine tailings to liquefaction.
By 1988, when a definitive study was commissioned by Kennecott as it considered expanding the then-82-year-old tailings pond, the picture became crystal clear. When the big one hits, consulting engineers said, the impoundment would likely fail, burying homes in Green Meadows.
But instead of notifying the community of the danger, as recommended by attorneys who warned of punitive damages and criminal liability if lives were lost and property damaged, Kennecott kept it quiet.
Hoping to avoid "panic and (law)suits," then-company president Frank Joklik orchestrated a cover-up, a cover-up made possible by state regulators who lost sight of their mandate to protect the public, and kept their lips zipped and their fingers crossed as hazard mitigation efforts ensued.
State dam safety officials were briefed on the problem as early as 1989. According to the company's internal investigation, a state official assured Kennecott that he had no intention of "going public" with the dangers, and, to circumvent open records laws, advised the company to withhold from the state any and all written records it didn't want the public to see.
Its secret safe, the copper company began clandestinely buying up homes in Green Meadows and leaving them vacant in an attempt to establish a buffer zone. Unconscionably, the homes were later resold to unknowing buyers in the mid-1990s.
Kennecott also ordered an actuarial study to determine the costs of a breach, a study that callously affixed a dollar figure to residents' lives. And it launched a project to replace, stabilize and dewater the tailings pond, hopefully before an earthquake struck.
Kennecott, it appears, won its race with the devil. And Green Meadows residents, who could have moved to safety had they been warned, apparently dodged a mudslide.
In the past two decades the company has replaced the tailings pond with a modern impoundment, and spent $13 million to strengthen and dewater the old pond, and shield residential areas with berms, in an ongoing stabilization project that will last another 10 years. According to company studies that have been reviewed and accepted as gospel by the state despite the company's penchant for hiding the truth, only a small area on the southeast corner of the old tailings pond falls short of state earthquake standards, a problem that will soon be remedied.
So, no harm, no foul. Amazingly, that's the analysis offered by David Marble, current chief of the state Dam Safety Office and the man in charge of protecting you from unsafe dams.
Marble praised Kennecott for working closely with the state to devise and implement an effective hazard mitigation program. He defended the state for not revealing the danger for all these years, noting public notification is the responsibility of the dam owner under state statutes. He questioned whether public notification was even required because the threat of a dam failure from an earthquake does not meet his dictionary's definition of an "emergency." And he said the state is not required to inspect tailings ponds that have been drained of surface water and are not in current use, regardless of the residual danger they may pose.
Kennecott officials are more humble than Marble. The company has apologized for the previous owners' past practices, and promises that things would be handled differently today. But the apology rings hollow because The Tribune, not the company, disclosed the past and present danger.
So what should happen now?
Kennecott attorneys had warned of criminal liability if the company failed to reveal the danger. That indicates an investigation by the state Attorney General's Office is warranted.
The state Legislature needs to update dam safety statutes to provide for the ongoing inspection of unused tailings ponds, to require public notification if a dam is susceptible to an earthquake-related failure, and to designate the Dam Safety Office, not dam owners, as the party responsible for issuing warnings.
And the Dam Safety Office needs to conduct its own study, or commission an independent third-party study, to determine if the old tailings pond is safe, instead of relying on the company's data. After all, Kennecott already fooled us once.
The Institute on Lake Superior Geology is a non-profit professional society with the objectives of providing a forum for exchange of geological ideas and scientific data and promoting better understanding of the geology of the Lake Superior region. The major activity of the Institute is an Annual Meeting with geological field trips and technical presentation.
The 54th Annual Institute of Lake Superior Geology is sponsored by MTU (Ted Bornhorst) and the Seamans Museum. May 6-10 in Marquette at the Ramada Inn. Featured speaker for the Thursday night banquet: Jon Cherry - Eagle Project. Jon will also be hosting a field trip to the Plains on one of those days. Heads up to any who wish to attend or wish to be aware.
Register here
Dr. Konak studied the strategies, networks and discourses of the movement.
Her presentation would revolve around the following questions:
What types of strategies/types of actions that the movement actors use?
What are their networks, what are their contacts?
How the actors frame or define the issues, problems, what are their concerns?
Did the movement reach its ultimate goal? How and why or why not?
Dr. Nahide Konak, Sociology Candidate Presentation
Monday, April 7th, 4:00pm, Brule Room UC
April 3, 2008
For Immediate Release
Great Lakes Author, Historian: Michigan’s Hypocrisy May Kill Great Lakes
Compact
Analysis shows Michigan must act swiftly, aggressively to protect water from withdrawal and
establish conservation practices
Great Lakes historian and author Peter Annin, in an article in today’s Detroit Free Press, warns that the eight-state Great Lakes Compact water protection pact may fail – partly due to Michigan’s historical hypocrisy in blocking withdrawals while failing to respect or conserve its own water resources.
The analysis painfully illustrates the need for Michigan legislators to enact strong state water protection laws along with their approval of the Great Lakes Compact.
The urgency was elevated this week when Ohio’s Lt. Governor, Lee Fisher, suggested that Great Lakes water might be sold to buyers in other parts of the nation.
“If the Compact fails, federal protection against Great Lakes diversions hangs by a tenuous legal thread,” said Hugh McDiarmid Jr. of the Michigan Environmental Council. “There are plenty of people and entities outside the Great Lakes waiting for that legal thread to snap.
“If Michigan’s legislature approves strong laws to keep our water where it belongs, it will be their everlasting legacy that they established a firewall against future abuse of our water resources whether the Compact becomes law or not.”
Annin gives the Compact a 50 percent chance of passage. Four states have passed it. Michigan and Pennsylvania are expected to approve it, while it has run into roadblocks in Wisconsin and Ohio. If approved, it would need Congressional approval and the President’s signature to become law.
Annin said suspicion over Michigan’s historical double-talk has helped fuel opposition in Ohio and Wisconsin. Michigan has strenuously opposed – and even legally blocked – proposed diversions outside the Great Lakes. The hypocrisy became apparent, however, when our state then failed to establish meaningful water conservation practices and flaunted its lack of water regulations.
Proposed state legislation would change that image by establishing conservation rules within the state, protecting Michigan’s streams and inland lakes from excessive withdrawals.
The Great Lakes, Great Michigan coalition – numbering more than 60 organizations and businesses – supports House legislation that comes closer to achieving the stringent protections that Michigan needs.
Competing legislation introduced in the Senate is far less protective, failing to designate groundwater as a public resource, foregoing public input into large-scale water withdrawal plans and allowing up to 25 percent of some stretches of Michigan streams to be drained with minimal or no oversight.
“Because Michigan is the only state entirely within the Great Lakes drainage basin, we have the most to gain from the Great Lakes Compact, and the most to lose if we do not establish our own standards,” said Dr. Grenetta Thomassey, Policy Director at Tip of the Mitt Watershed Council. “We are hopeful our legislators act to ensure that water users within Michigan do not drain rivers and dry up wetlands.”
The Free Press’ article with Annin’s analysis can be found at:
Click here to read more
Contact:
Hugh McDiarmid Jr., Michigan Environmental Council: 248-660-4300
Grenetta Thomassey, Tip of the Mitt Watershed Council: 231-838-5193
Brian Beauchamp, Michigan League of Conservation Voters: 734-904-9915
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