Lack of Mining Oversight Jeopardizes the Far North
Sep 22nd, 2010 6:50 AM
For Immediate Release
Lack of Mining Oversight Jeopardizes the Far North
Toronto, 22 September 2010 – The Environmental Commissioner of Ontario says mining service companies are using claim staking, exploration, and related activities to circumvent the government’s promise to protect half the boreal forest in the Far North. In his 2009/2010 annual report released today, Gord Miller says this is putting the fragile environment of northern Ontario at risk.
Last year, two lines of mining claims hundreds of kilometres long were staked by mining exploration companies to accommodate future rail access leading out of the Ring of Fire, an area known to contain gold, diamonds and potentially the largest source of chromite in North America. “Using mining claims to cut rail lines across a giant swath of the boreal forest nullifies any reasonable discussion about how to plan the protection and the development of northern Ontario,” says Miller.
“Furthermore, the government’s silence on this staking implies that it approves this as appropriate under the
Mining Act and its proposed
Far North Act.”
The report also found that ineffective government oversight allowed service companies to illegally construct a mining camp and airstrips without approval. These cases raise legitimate concerns that the government is either unaware of, or turning a blind eye to, mining-related activities that undermine the effectiveness of land use planning in the Far North.
The Commissioner is also worried the government’s recently revamped
Mining Act does not require the consideration of environmental impacts before development can occur. Gord Miller recommends that the government’s forthcoming mining regulation require that exploration plans and permits include an environmental impact assessment.
“The environment is an after-thought when the government regulates mining in Ontario,” says Miller. “We need to consider the environment upfront and during all stages of mining activity, including the planning of areas where mining is inappropriate.”
This issue was raised by members of the public, who used the
Environmental Bill of Rights to express concerns about mining exploration for uranium.
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Click here to read the chapter “Reforming the Mining Act” on the website of the Environmental Commissioner of Ontario.
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Click here to download the full report in .pdf.
Click links below to access media releases on other topics mentioned in the Environmental Commissioner’s 2009/2010 Annual Report –
Refining Conservation:
Environmental Commissioner Releases 2009/2010 Annual Report
Aging Landfills: Ontario’s Forgotten Polluters
Sewage Treatment – Not Good Enough
Province’s air quality standards are not airtight
Wanted: One billion more trees for southern Ontario
Government’s plan will not save caribou
Loophole big enough to truck 160,000 tonnes of sand through
More scrutiny needed for large natural gas plants
Province allows provincially significant wetlands to be drained
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The
Environmental Commissioner of Ontario is appointed by the Legislative Assembly to be the province's independent environmental watchdog, and report publicly on the government's environmental decision-making.
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For more information, contact:
Hayley Easto
Communications and Outreach Coordinator
Environmental Commissioner of Ontario
416-325-3371 / 416-819-1673
hayley.easto@eco.on.ca