Superstack Removal Symbolic of Mining Industry’s Green Efforts – by Steve May (Sudbury Star – Novmeber 15, 2014)

The Sudbury Star is the City of Greater Sudbury’s daily newspaper.

www.sudburysteve.ca

Last week in Sudbury, Kelly Strong, Vice President of Vale’s Ontario and U.K. Operations, announced that Vale was considering taking down the iconic Superstack – a symbol of both Sudbury’s mining prosperity and of environmental degradation.

Mining has a reputation of being one of the world’s least environmentally-friendly enterprises. Along with scars left imprinted on natural landscapes, toxic chemicals released from processing and refining poison our soils and water. Massive amounts of energy, often from fossil fuel sources, are used to power industrial mining processes.

Yet, the world has a voracious appetite for minerals and metals. According to the Ontario Mining Association, mining contributes approximately $10 billion annually to Ontario’s economy, and employs around 23,000 workers directly and in support activities. Although we could be doing a much better job at recycling existing mined materials, it is expected that demand for new resources will remain high.

The story of the mining industry’s impacts on the natural environment isn’t all that different from that of other industries, except perhaps for the scale. Throughout the 20th Century, the mining industry was prodded to clean up its processes coincident with the public’s demand for healthier communities. In the 1960’s, the publication of Rachel Carson’s “Silent Spring” kicked off an environmental awakening culminating in the early 1970’s with new federal and provincial laws to protect the environment. With the public demanding real action from government and industry, INCO, Vale’s predecessor, was at work planning to reduce dangerous emissions.

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