Via the Southern Environmental Law Center
CHAPEL HILL, NC –
The Environmental Protection Agency last night backed away from its earlier finding that an 11,000 acre mine expansion by PCS Phosphate posed “unacceptable harm” to critical wetlands and fisheries in the nation’s second largest estuary, the Albemarle-Pamlico, according to environmental groups. After elevating the permit to the national level in a rare move, EPA could have vetoed the destruction of 1,200 acres of the most critical wetlands and nurseries while still allowing continued mining by the company for 29 years.
“EPA has inexplicably reversed course, embracing a devastating mine plan that it determined would cause unacceptable harm just two months ago,” said Derb Carter, director, Carolinas Office, the Southern Environmental Law Center. “EPA isn’t protecting the environment our children and grandchildren will inherit long after PCS Phosphate mining has left the area.
After EPA’s elevation of the mining permit, the Corps rejected the minimum steps EPA determined necessary to avoid “unacceptable” impacts from the mine expansion, leaving EPA’s concerns largely unaddressed. In its letter accepting the permit, EPA acknowledged the inevitable destruction it has now blessed, noting that the permit is “designed to provide for the early detection of unacceptable impacts.”
In a June 11th letter to EPA following the Corps permit decision, the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council recommended EPA veto the permit in concurrence with multiple federal and state agencies. The Council found that the permitted mine expansion will result in “significant and unacceptable impacts” to essential fish habitats including coastal ecosystems and aquatic resources that depend on them.
Environmental groups echoed these concerns in urging EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson to stand by her agency’s findings and implement the administration’s pledge in a May 20th letter to U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer, “we need to identify opportunities to expand protection of wetlands and other aquatic resources that are especially vulnerable or critical to sustaining the health of [aquatic] systems.”
In a letter to the Corps, EPA stated it will not act to prevent the destruction of wetlands and fisheries.
PCS Phosphate’s permitted mine expansion will be the largest single destruction of wetlands permitted in North Carolina history. It jeopardizes the irreplaceable ecosystem of Albemarle-Pamlico Sound, the nation’s second largest estuary and one of the most productive American fisheries which generates thousands of jobs and over $1 billion annually.
In its objections to the permit, EPA requested that the Corps revise the permit to
* reduce wetland impacts by 29 percent (1,166 acres);
* prohibit mining that would affect the most sensitive fish nursery areas, prohibit mining of rare hardwood wetlands; and
* improve the proposed mitigation to compensate for remaining wetland and water quality impacts.
The Corps’s response to EPA reduces wetland impacts by only 1 percent (44 acres) and fails to address other EPA concerns and recommendations.
Concern over PCS Phosphate’s planned destruction of wetlands and primary nurseries near the Pamlico River remain unaddressed despite consistently being raised by the N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, U.S. EPA, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, National Marine Fisheries Service, and the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council throughout the permit process.
Acting as its own agent of delay, the company sued North Carolina for years during the permitting process after being warned such action would delay the issuance of any permit. PCS Phosphate, a subsidiary of Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan, is now permitted to mine 11,000 acres, including 4,000 acres of wetlands and more than four miles of tidal creeks and streams bordering the Pamlico River.
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Thursday, June 18, 2009
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