‘Elk River is being poisoned’ by coal mining, study finds – by Mark Hume (Globe and Mail – March 21, 2013)

The Globe and Mail is Canada’s national newspaper with the second largest broadsheet circulation in the country. It has enormous influence on Canada’s political and business elite.

VANCOUVER – As it flows through the Rocky Mountains, near Fernie in southeastern British Columbia, the Elk River seems the picture of environmental health, with its crystal-clear waters supporting a world-famous sports fishery.

But a new study by U.S. researchers warns that all is not well below the surface, where invisible pollutants – including selenium, a metal-like element that can cause spinal deformities in young fish – have reached alarming levels.

“We’ve basically learned that the Elk River is being poisoned,” Sarah Cox, interim director of the Sierra Club of B.C., said Wednesday.

Ms. Cox said a report co-authored by Richard Hauer, of the University of Montana, shows that selenium, nitrate and phosphate levels in the Elk are far higher than expected. “This study … clearly shows selenium has been collecting to toxic levels,” she said. “This is a huge problem.… Definitely alarm bells are ringing.”

Environment Canada had an investigative team in the Elk Valley last summer collecting water and fish egg samples, but on Wednesday the federal government wasn’t able to immediately find a spokesperson to comment.

Chris Stannell, a spokesman for Teck Resources Ltd., which operates five coal mines in the Elk Valley, said he had not seen the U.S. report and couldn’t respond directly to it.But he stated in an e-mail that the company “is committed to responsibly managing selenium at our operations in order to ensure the continued health of the Elk River watershed.”

Mr. Stannell said the company plans to invest $600-million over the next five years on water diversion and treatment facilities and on environmental research.

The B.C. Ministry of Environment issued a statement, saying: “The concerns identified by Montana and the U.S. government reinforce the need to address the selenium issue fully – B.C. is taking the issue of selenium management very seriously on both sides of the border.”

For the rest of this article, please go to Globe and Mail website: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/british-columbia/elk-river-is-being-poisoned-by-coal-mining-study-finds/article10046883/%3bjsessionid=s48bRMJRf9Mr32SnKx3vPqmw12l13TphrFhpZq5J4LCnb0MPlMxS!1386422548/?ord=1